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                    <text>Cbc Spectrum
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

•

VOL. 16

•

NO. 57

•

FRIDAY, AUGUST 19, 1966

•

BUFFALO

•

NEW YORK

SUNY Board of Trustees
Authorizes Site Restudy

Campus Planning Committee
To Provide Site Education
By

MICHAEL L. D'AMICO

Organization of the Campus
Planning Committee is under way.
At a meeting held Monday evening in the Conference Theater,
a number of interested people
expressed interest in the direction the new UB campus is going
to take. The primary concerns
of the group are the location of

the new campus and the role of
students and faculty in planning
that campus, wherever it may be
built.

Mr. Robert Coles, who is a
member of the Committee for an
Urban

Campus, addressed the
meeting and answered a number
of questions concerning the location of the new campus. Mr. Coles,
a local architect and city planner,

received his M.A. at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Speaking to the group for nearly an hour, Mr. Coles made a
number of interesting points. He
said that “this is the time to reopen the site issue.” He gave the
following reasons: (1) Cities and
their problems have become more
and more explosive. Mr. Coles
made reference to the outbreaks
of U.S. cities in the past few
years. (2) The university had selected Mr. Martin Meyerson as
its new president and there has
been a slowdown in planning
in Amherst. Mr. Meyerson is dean
of environmental design at Berkeley and considered to be one of
the best city planners in the
country. As far as delays in Amherst are concerned, Mr. Coles
said that there is “no conceptual
plan for the University whatsoever.” (3) Amherst has not recognized the responsibilities of accepting a large university into its
midst. Instead, road blocks have
been set up by the Town. (4) The
waterfront site may have been
pushed aside because of the Republican leadership struggle that
existed in the area in 1964. Mr.
Coles said that the present administration is highly receptive
to a university on the Buffalo
waterfront.
Mr. Coles revealed that the
Committee for an Urban Campus
has been working since June and
has done considerable research
into both the Amherst and the
Waterfront sites. In the Committee’s opinion, “the Waterfront
site is not only adequate but more
prepared to meet the needs of
the University.” It is convinced
that there are “no technical
Problems that cannot be surmounted in the Waterfront.”
According to Mr. Coles, Mr.
Meyerson and
Dr. Gould were
notified in July of the Commit-

tee’s findings. Dr. Gould then issued a statement which called
the decision to build in Amherst
“irrevocable.” This led the Com
mittee to appeal to Governor
Rockefeller for, in the words of
Mr. Coles, “no decision concerning a university of this size is
irrevocable.” The Governor then
asked Dr. Gould and the Board
of Trustees to re-evaluate the
Waterfront site. A message from
the Governor’s Office asked the
group to continue to search for
information.
In answering a number of questions concerning progress in Amherst, Mr. Coles noted that “no
planning has taken place since
programming has not yet jelled.”
He also said that most of the
money spent in Amherst has been
for land acquisition and should
the University decide not to build
there, there would be no loss to
the University since the land
would retain its value.

Mr. Coles touched upon land
availability and said that in 1964
the State University Construction
Fund required a minimum of 300
acres and a maximum of 700 to
800 acres if extensively developto 500 acres available

on

the
Waterfront. (Some studies have
indicated that 700 to 800 acres
are available.)
Discussion continued after Mr.
Coles left and it was decided that
a loose organization would be
formed for research. This skeleton organization would gather
facts for students arriving in the
fall. A number of committees
were set up and Steve Crafts was
elected as temporary representative to the Committee for an
Urban Campus which Mr. Coles
represents.
It was decided at Monday's
meeting that the Campus Planning Committee would favor the
Waterfront site and seek ways in
which the students and faculty
could make known their desires
about the nature of the new campus. “We don’t want a campus of
little boxes and little circles,”
said one spokesman of the Committee.
Because time is so important
in the site issue, the Campus
Planning Committee plans to
swing into action immediately.
They plan to make available in a
short time all of the facts surrounding both the Amherst and
the Waterfront sites. “We are
sure that once the facts are made
known, most will favor the downtown site. This is the course the
CPC is taking and we hope that
more of the students and faculty
will take an active part in helping us to achieve these ends.”

“During the period of restudy,
the State University will proceed
in such a manner as to minimize
any delay in connection with the
planning and development of a
relocated campus.”
The Trustees’ response came
from its August 11 meeting, a
day after the Rockefeller request
was sent to Dr. Samuel Gould.
In his letter to Gould, Rockefeller pointed out that the location of the new campus “will profoundly influence the nature and
character of the physical development of adjacent areas. As a consequence, all must agree that
every conceivable aspect of the

total project, including develop-

ments since the original decision,

should be given careful consideration.”

Later he suggested that “be-

cause of the unique importance
of this proposal to the program
of revitalization of the heart of
the city, I would like to suggest
that a review and study of the
‘Waterfront Area’ be made prior
to the commencement of any construction at the Amherst site.”
Rockefeller saw no reason "why
general planning for a relocated
campus . . . cannot continue during the period of restudy so that
minimal delay will be involved
should the original determination
be reaffirmed while, at the same
time, the results of such general
planning would be as useful and
necessary in the waterfront area
should that be chosen.”

Sander Arraignment Postponed
Pending Grand Jury Investigation
On Monday, August 15, Detective Sergeant Samuel Giambrone
appeared before Judge Ostrowski
of the City Court to answer
charges of third degree assault
filed by William Sander, a graduate student here (see Spectrum,
August 12).
On Friday, August 12, the city
police issued a new charge
against Mr. Sander. The original
charge of “sidewalk blocking"
and a second charge of disorderly
conduct had both previously been
dismissed. The new charge accuses Mr. Sander of “blocking
traffic with approximately twenty

others” with the “intent to commit a breach of the peace.”
On a motion of District Attorney Michael Dillon, the judge
postponed arraignment for Giambrone and Sander, on their respective charges until October 3
to allow the September Grand
Jury time to investigate both
cases. This was done over the
objection of Mr. Sander.
The Grand Jury can subpoena
all those connected, directly or
indirectly, with the incident
which occurred on the August
6 Peace March. If granted immunity, all witnesses must an-

swcr any questions put to tjiem
by the Grand Jury or the District
Attorney. One witness at court
on Monday warned that “this
may be the beginning of a little
HUAC in Buffalo. They will use
this case to have the Grand Jury
investigate the entire peace and
civil rights movement, as well as
the student movement, in Buffalo. You must answer all their
questions or face a jail sentence
for contempt. They may grant
you immunity from prosecution,
but not from the loss of your
job or research grant.” He predicted, “we are in for a rough
September.”

HCUA Peace Movement Hearings
Provoke Renewed Opposition
By DANNY KATZ
The House Un-American Activities Committee defied a Fed-

eral Court temporary restraining

order, which would have postponed the hearings for at least
ten days, and began investigation
of the anti-Vietnam war movement. A special three-judge panel
dissolved the restraining order
later in the day, but not before
Rep. Joe R. Pool (D.-Texas), assembled a subcommitttee in definance of restraining order.
The hearings began Tuesday
Horning at 10 a.m. in the Cannon
House Office Building. The subcommittee was comprised of Rep.
Senner (D.-Ariz.), Buchanan (R.Ala), Clawson (R.-Calif.), Ichord
(D.-Mo.), Ashbrook (R.-Ohio), and
Pool. Absent was Rep. Willis (D.La.)

Chairman Pool declared in an
opening statement before subpoened witnesses and observers,
“this Committee, operating in accord with the principles of free
speech and free expression, will
not investigate the ideologies or
political thought of individuals
or groups. It will, rather, determine the extent of aid given
through overt act to an enemy
of the United States.”
The first witness called by the
committee was Philip Luce, a
former member of the Progressive Labor Movement, now a Fed-

eral informer.
Luce was questioned about his
role in the Progressive Labor
Movement and the organization's
ideology. His answers led Rep.
Pool to inquire, “What is Marx-

ism-Leninism?” Three hours of

questioning dealt with PL’s ideology, the role of the May 2nd
Movement in PL, and the naming

of individuals active in the Move“'
merit.'
Luce also testified about PL’s
magazine, PL, their newspaper,
Challenge, and the May 2nd
Movement’s newspaper, Free Student. He also mentioned Dr.
Allen Krebs and the Free University of New York, but did
not testify that they were related to PL.
In the middle of Luce’s testimony, Jeffrey Gordon, a member
of PL, rose and shouted, “let’s
stop this fink testimony,” He was
dragged from the Hearing by
five federal marshals and was
surrounded by a dozen press
photographers. This
prompted
Pool to state, “this proves the
unwillingness of certain people
to engage in democratic debate.”
Another man stood and screamed,
“This sure is a funny hearing.”
As he was .being dragged from
the room, another man rose,
pointed to him and said, "that’s
an example of your committee's
democratic diologue." He was
quickly dragged from the room.
The next witness to take the
stand was Jeffrey Gordon, student
organizer for PL. When asked his
name, he replied, “My name is
Jeffrey Gordon and I stand for
the American Revolution,"
Gordon objected to the Committee’s hearings on the basis
of the 6th, the 9th, and 14th
Amendments to the Constitution.
When asked if he is a member
of PL he declared, "1 am proud
to be a member of the Progres"

1

Robert Coles addresses Campus Planning Committee meeting

In response to Governor Nelson
Rockefeller’s request that the
decision which placed the new
SUNYAB campus in Amherst be
reviewed, the Executive Committee of the State University Board
of Trustees issued following statement through Board Chairman
Clifton W. Phalen:
“The committee has pointed out
that the-trustees’ decision to relocate in Amherst was arrived at
after thorough study of various
alternative locations, and the studies, of course, included the
Waterfront area.
“Nevertheless, the committee
agreed that such a decision is of
major importance and it is willing on behalf of the Board of
Trustees to authorize a restudy of
this matter.

—

sive Labor Party, but I would not
be proud to sit on this Committee.” When asked whether PL
supports the sending of medical
snppties-tothe National Liberation Front of South Vietnam, he
replied, "as American citizens,
as people of the world, we believe that as part of our humanity, the giving of blood to victims
of aggression and bombing represents our patriotism.” Gor(Cont'd on Pg. 2)

Motorcade to
Counter LBJ
Buffalo Visit
A counter motorcade will greet
President Johnson’s appearance
in the Queen City today. The
President will arrive at the airport at about 1:20 p.m., travel by
motorcade to Niagara Square for
a speech, and make a short check
of the Lake Erie pollution situation. He will also support the
candidacies of local Democratic
congressmen.

The counter motorcade will
demonstrate opposition to the
American war policy. Those interested in participating in the
motorcade will meet in the parking lot at the corner of Main and

Bailey at 11 a.m.
A demonstration is also being
planned (or Niagara Square.
Those not participating in the
counter motorcade yet still interested in showing their opposition to the war in Vietnam are
requested to meet at the corner
lot at 11 a m.

�from Pg.

1)

A Congressional Intern in the
Office of Rep. John B. Anderson
(R.-H1.) granted the Spectrum a
personal interview following the
hearings. Regarding the general
nature of the Committee, he
stated, “I believe it fulfills a vital function in our country, and
that it has been most effective
in the control of internal com-

munism. Some of its methods,
such as implication through guilt
by association, I cannot approve
of completely. The Committee
has brought the leaders of internal communism out into the
open.’’

When asked why communism
had to be controlled at all, he
replied, “Communism is subversive and it advocated the overthrow of our system of government. Our government is democratic and I believe the men in
Congress are very conscientious
and worthy of our respect as
leaders.”
The intern was asked whether
he believed the men on the UnAmerican Activities Committee
were elected democratically. He
said, “Senner was not, his district was too small. Willis from
Louisiana wasn’t, he probably
had no Republican opposition.
Buchanan was not, you know the
situation in Alabama, Ichord I
don’t know; Pool, Ashbrook, and
Clawson were.”
The Spectrum also received the
exclusive interview with Barry
Stein, a member of the Progressive Labor Party, which follows:
Spectrum: As a member of the
Progressive Labor Party, what
are your impressions of HUAC
in general?
Stein: The Committee is one
particular acting body of a government which exists to meet the
aims of a relatively small portion of the population of this
nation; namely those who own
and control the basic industries,

don’s testimony concluded TueSday’s hearings.
resources, and finances of this
country, with huge material interests throughout the world. The
role of HUAC has been primarily
the attempt to intimidate directly
thosepeoplewhoexpose thepohactions of the VS.
Government which benefit this
wealthy class. Fur hermore programs for equitable distribution
of wealth can thus be thwarted.
Spectrum: What are your reflections on Tuesday’s hearings?
Stein: In convening the hearings for support of the Pool
cies

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ALBANY. N.Y.—The Board of

Trustees of the SUNY appointed
an Acting Dean of University
College and a Dean of the recent-

ly established School of Health

Related Professions yesterday,

Dr. Stanley J. Segal, director of
the University’s Student Counsel3h wm ing Center, will serve as Acting
W
K Dean of University College, and
J9H M Dr. J. Warren Perry, Deputy AsjjT M
{K
ISBR ,.K sistant Commissioner, Research
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and Training, Vocational RehabilBooks to bo placed in the now Physical Sciaticas Library
itation Administration, Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare, will assume the Health
Related Professions post.

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New Physical Sciences Library
Opposed as 'Very Inconvenient'

The consolidation of the physics, chemistry, and engineering
libraries into a central Physical
Sciences Library has caused a
minor skirmish between the departments involved and the University’s library administration.
The new Physical Sciences Library, now in the process of
being moved into the annex surrounded by Parker and Hochstetter Halls was planned as long
as a year ago. William Ernst,
Associate Director of the Library, gave the reasons for the
move as available space in the
new buildings, the present crowded conditions of the existing libraries. “With lack of space,
there’s not much more we can
do,” he added. Dr. Ta-You Wu,
Acting Chairman of the Physics
Department, claims that the University library administration envisions a general physical sciences library to provide better
service at less money (duplication
expenses) and more space. But,
as Dr. Wu points out, the central
library idea differs from that
of most physical science setups
in the country.
“A central library makes it
very inconvenient for us,” says
Luncheon will be supplied and
Dr. Wu. He cited limited stack
will include vegetarian and nonaccess for faculty and students
vegetarian sandwiches, hot dogs, as a source of inconvenience.
salad, snacks, and cold beverages. The central library, he explained,
Lunch will be followed by sports goes against both the habit and
and a meeting of the general necessity of physical scientists.
Working scientists have a conbody to elect new officers. Anreother game period will follow the stant need for journals and
ferences close at hand. The deelections.
partmental library has traditionally provided easily accessible
information. A central library
cannot do this.
tee?

Stein: I believe PL does provide the proper basic approach
to handling qusetions concerning
peace, jobs, housing, racial equality, education, etc. But even
more, the socialist outlook has
an ethical view of all men working together, helping one another, for the building of a
society to develop the talents of
all the people to the greatest
level, as opposed to the ethic
of the capitalist system of getting
whatever one can for oneself,
even at the expense of others.
The solutions of the questions
stated clash with the aims of
those who are presently in control. It is therefore the desire
of these rulers to stamp out the
ideas presented by PL, M2M
(May 2nd Movement), VDC (Vietnam Day Committee), DuBois
Clubs, and those who recognize
these fundamentally opposed historical developments, or at least
major aspects of them.
The investigation will continue
through next week.

India Association Picnic Tomorrow
The India Association will hold
a picnic at noon tomorrow in
Chestnut Ridge Park. All members and friends will assemble
near the parking lot in front of
Lockwood Library at 11:20 a.nr
where, it is hoped, those who
have cars will bring them. Transportation will be provided for
those needing it.

�

tk
.

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.

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.

and

Amendment to the Internal Security Act. which penalizes ceractions protesting the role
of the U.S. in the Vietnam war,
HUAC plans to assist “legal” suppression of the peace movement.
The hearings themselves form an
attack by the Johnson Administration on this movement.
Spectrum: Why do you feel
PL was attacked by the Commit-

Trustees Name

PWHBL

...

.

HCUA Hearings
(Cool’d

Friday, August 19, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
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—

Dr. Wu feels that the reasons
given by the library for the
change indicate that the library
administration does not understand the nature of physical science work. Although the departments involved opposed the central library concept from the
beginning, the matter was decided without consulting the departments or the library committee of the Faculty Senate.
At a meeting called by Dr.
Gordon Harris, Chairman of the
Chemistry Department and head
of the Physical Sciences division
of Arts and Sciences, the departments agreed on the inadvisability of the central library and
decided to write Dr. Furnas, Uni-

versity President, voicing their
complaint. Within a short time,
meetings were held both by
Dean Ketter of the Graduate
School and Dr. Furnas. At the
Furnas meeting, the president
apologized for not keeping up
with events and intervened on
the behalf of the departments.
A compromise was reached
whereby all but the Engineering
School would retain those books
which were most needed in a
departmental library. As Dr. Wu
describes it, they had found “the
least dissatisfactory way of settling the matter.”
“I am not so concerned with

the present .
the need for
space is great,” said Dr. Wu. As
a matter of principle I believe
a departmental library to be a
necessity. Libraries exist for students and faculty. We should
keep this problem open for future planning of the new campus.”
He added, “On important issues
the faculty should at least be
heard.”
.

.

ROIC Field Training
For 65 of the juniors &amp; seniors
enrolled in Air Force ROTC at
UB, at least one month of theii
summer has been rigorously
spent in Field Training, a compulsory program for ROTC cadets
that is roughly comparable to the
Army’s basic training.
This summer UB cadets were
assigned to either Plattsburgh,
New York or Loring, Maine for
the training program which included flights in Air Force tankers, pistol firing, land and water
survival, and career orientation.

Correction
Last week the Spectrum erronthe American
Tactical Assault on Communism
group as the South Park Fascist
Club. Mr. Robert Johnson is qpt
therefore director of the South
Park Fascist Club as was reported. Further investigation has also
revealed that although the quotations attributed to Mr. Johnson
were heard by the marchers, it is
not certain that they were yelled
by Mr. Johnson. We apologize
for these errors.
eously identified

Dr. Segal follows Dr. Bradley
Chapin as head of University College, which consists of the twoyear degree programs offered by
the University and the various
courses of study available to
freshman and sophomores in the
College of Arts and Sciences. Dr.
Chapin resigned to accept the
position of chairman of the Department of History at Ohio State
University.
Dr. Segal was named director
of the Student Counseling Center
in 1959. He was appointed an
associate professor of psychology
at the same time. He received his
B.A. from the City College of
New York, and both his M.A. and
Ph.D. degrees from the University of Michigan. Dr. Segal served
as a psychologist in the Counseling Division of the University of
Michigan from 1951-1956. During
the same period he also taught

graduate courses at Michigan.
Upon his arrival at Buffalo, Dr.
Segal organized and developed
the Counseling Center’s program.
He has published several articles
in professional journals.

Since its beginning in October
1965 the School of Health Related Professions has been under
the leadership of Acting Dean
Albert C. Rekate. Dr. Rekate will
now assume the post of Associate
Dean and Director of Clinical
Services.

In commenting on Dr. Perry’s
appointment, Dr. Peter F. Regan,
University Vice President for
Health Affairs said, “We are very
happy that we have been able to
attract the man most highly qualified to guide the future growth
of this new School, the fourth
to be established in the United
States. Because of his past positions in Federal service Dr. Perry
has had a unique opportunity to

observe and evaluate programs
for the education of health personnel. We are also most fortunate
that Dr. Albert C. Rekate has
agreed to accept prime responsibility for the development, coordination and supervision of the
clinical aspects of the various
programs of the School.”
Other positions held by Dr,
Perry include director of prosthetic-orthotic education at the
Northwestern University Medical

School, and lecturer for the Department of Psychology at the
University of Chicago.
The new dean received his B.A.
degree from DePauw University
in 1944, and his M.A. and Ph.D.
degrees from Northwestern University in 1952 and 1955 respectively. He is a member of the
American Psychological Association, the American Personnel and
Guidance Association, the National Rehabilitation Association, and
Delta Tau Delta and Phi Beta
Kappa honorary fraternities.
FOR SALE

1961 Morris Minor, 32,000 miles.
$400. Call TF 2-5406.
1965 Yamaha, 250cc. Phone TF 42639, between 5:30-7:30 p.m.

�Friday, August 19, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

Text of Rockefeller Letter to Gould
ED. NOTE: The following is tho
text of the letter deted August 11
from Governor Nelson Rockefeller to Samuel Gould, State University President, in which the
Governor asked for a review of
the new campus site decision.
“The merger into the State
University in 1962, of the former
private University of Buffalo,
represented a magnificent addition to the resources of our state
university. Its subsequent designation in the master plan as one
of our university centers evidenced both our appreciation of
its traditions of educational excellence and our desire that the
Buffalo area be the home of one
of the Empire State’s four great
educational and cultural centers.

“Before you became president of the State University in
September 1964 an event of the
greatest significance insofar as
the qualitative and quantitative
growth of the State University
is concerned—the Board of Trustees of the State University and
members of the Council of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo, decided to relocate all
elements of the State University of New York at Buffalo at a
new site in the Town of Amherst, except for the medical
school and associated health
schools and facilities which
would continue to grow on the
existing campus.

“I understand that since that
decision was made considerable
acreage has been acquired in
the Town of Amherst, but no
permanent construction has been
although intensive
undertaken
planning is being progressed
—

rapidly.

“I am sure that the decision to
relocate in Amherst was not arrived at lightly—but rather only
after thorough study of various
alternative locations. Nonetheless, the proposed relocation involves not alone the growth of
the State University of New
York at Buffalo as a center of
higher education, but also an investment of several hundred
million dollars of public funds.
"Its location will profoundly
influence the nature and character of the physical development
of adjacent areas. As a consequence, all must agree that
every conceivable aspect of the
total project, including any de-

since the original
decision, should be given careful consideration.

velopments

“Buffalo, one of the great
cities of the nation, is the second
largest city of our state. Its
growth and development have
been and continue to be of great
interest to me, not alone because
of what they mean to the people
who live there, but also because of the importance of Buffalo to the state as a whole.
“Strong representations have
more recently been made that
an area within the City of Buffalo
known generally as the

ment of any construction at the

that his views will be of great
interest.

“I would appreciate it very
much if you would take up this
matter with the members of the
Board of Trustees of the State
University and the members of
the local council of the State
University of New York at Buffalo.

"I see no reason why general
planning for a relocated campus
(as distinguished from land
acquisition and specific building
design) cannot continue during
the period of resludy so that
minimal delay will be involved
should the original determination
planning would be as useful and
be reaffirmed while, at the same
time, the results of such general
necessary in the waterfront area

Amherst site.

“In this connection I note with
interest that Martin Meyerson,
who will become president of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo on Sept. 1, 1966, came to
this new responsibility from his
post as dean of the School of
Environmental Design at the
University of California at Berkeley and is reputed to be one
of the outstanding planners in
the country. If as I hope, the
restudy is undertaken, I am sure

rsCetter
TO

to

THE EDITOR:

to the outlandish plan to meld

the three departmental libraries
of Physics, Chemistry, and Engineering into one conglomerated
library of the technical sciences.
We, as graduate students in the
Department of Physics, oppose
this action most vehemently for
the reasons stated below, and
urge that the administration take
the necessary steps to reverse
this action and insure this university of the kind of library
most conducive to academic excellence.
1) No major university in this
country has a central library system such as is being imposed here
against the will of the faculty and
students alike.
2) In all the top universities
the Physics Departments have
their own separate libraries. Such
a system is necessary to insure
that the books purchased will be
of the quality required to further
academic excellence. Only physicists, working in physics, can
know what these requirements
are; and only someone who feels
it is his library, not the plaything of bureaucracy, can be expected to contribute effectively
to the development of a good
technical library.
—

3) The library staff is forming
the central library for its own
convenience, not realizing, perhaps, that they are not the reason
for the library’s existence. We
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

"Brcium of the unique importance of this proposal to the
Program of revitalization of the
Heart of the city, I would like
to suggest that a review and
study of the 'Waterfront Area'
be made prior to the commence-

cation.
Sincerely yours.

H. L. MENCKEN

Nelson A. Rockefeller”

tile Editor

Mencken First Editions
On Display in Lockwood

library staff should be secondary
in importance to the needs of
An exhibit of H. L. Mencken’s
the faculty and students who are
the only ones capable of fulfill- first editions is currently on dising the purposes of the technical play in Lockwood Library ballibraries; which are to use them cony.
as sources of knoweledge and as

research tools.

Having a physics library
within the department is much
more conducive to research than
a central library would be because it can be used for quick
reference. Also, it makes possible
the granting of special privileges
to faculty members and their
4)

H. L. Mencken’s chief interest

was in daily-newspaper journal-

research associates,
which further facilitates the use
of the library.

ism. As a reporter he gained national notoriety for his burlesque
coverage of the famous Scopes
trial, and for his satirical accounts of political conventions.
While he enjoyed poking fun at
American politics, he had no
sympathy for “the Proletarian
brethren who argue that every
book should support the revolution.”

5) An important factor in inducing quality professors and
good students to come to a university is the availability of a
good departmental library. These
people are never impressed with

Thanks to his vigorous contributions to magazines and newspapers, his editorial remarks in the
American Mercury, and his series
of Prejudices (6 vols. 1919-1927),

graduate

Mencken’s views on American
life and letters became well
known. His scathing denunciations of shams and hypocricies in
the literary mores of his day encouraged the efforts of writers
such as Cabell, Gather, Dreiser,
Hergesheimer, Lewis, and Sandbrug. The “aid and comfort" he
gave to these authors, and the
healthy influence he had on
American literature cannot be
overemphasized.

Mencken’s long list of books
includes criticism, philosophy,
plays, and verse. The American
Language, An Inquiry into the
Development of Engliih in the
United States (1919), now in its
fifth revised edition, is regarded
as a classic in its field.
The exhibit will continue
through September 21.

librarians’ ideas of what constitutes a good technical library.

We feel very strongly that the
management of the physics li-

brary should be in the hands of
the Physics Department itself and
to proceed otherwise would be
both detrimental to the future
of our university and, by ignoring the wishes of the students
and faculty, would be a serious

breach of academic freedom.
Lance Lessler
V. G. Kaveshwar
James D. Lyons

Henry Nebel
R. V. Kaiser
Jerry Lucas

PERSONAL

15
minutes walk from campus.
Help with two children.
Call
TF 6-4333.
FREE ROOM AND BOARD.

—

area.

“With sincere appreciation for

your distinguished leadership of
the state university as it is
emerging as one of the world’s
great institutions of higher edu-

feel that the convenience of the

It has come to our attention,
indirectly, that some major changes in our library system are to
take effect quite soon. We refer

—

would be
‘Waterfront Area’
an excellent alternative location
to Amherst; that such a location
in the heart of the city, proximate to the many cultural advantages which the city offers,
would be mutually advantageous to the students of the university and the residents of the
city; that the location of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo there would provide material assistance to the efforts
of the city officials, local citizens, and interested civic groups
who are concerned with the redevelopment of this general

should that be chosen.

LEONARDO'S
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LUNCHEONS
11:45 until 3:00
DINNERS
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Two Locations:

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1205 Niagara Falls Blvd.

�Friday, August 19,

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Sfcsas

ennan

For about twenty minutes (primarily because of the
character of Gromek, masterfully portrayed by Wolfgang
Kleister), I was lured into thinking that Torn Curtain might
be a reassertion of Hitchcock’s directorial strength. Instead,
it turned out to be as dreary and as fatuous as Mamie, his
previous opus. The giveaway, 1 realize now, was the shot
of Hitchcock in the film, sitting in a hotel lobby holding a
baby. The camera dwells on him for a few seconds while
the theme music from his old television show plays on the
soundtrack.
In Hitchcock’s best films, his appearance on camera not
only served as a directorial signature, and an in-joke, but
also a reminder that what you were watching was a “film,”
an illusion. Aesthetically (like the gratuitous ending of
North By Northwest) it alienated the viewer from the action,
refused to allow us to relax our emotions and intellects. It
was this that first caused men like Roman Polanski and
Claude Chabrol to become aware of the intricacies of Hitchcock’s direction. But in Torn Curtain, the shot is only a joke,
nothing more. And a heavy-handed joke at that. Which is
fitting, because the film is heavy-handed, repetitive, and
lacking in suspense.
Not only do we know that Paul Newman and Julie
Andrews will come through their escapade unharmed, but
because of the banality of Brian Moore’s script, we cannot
even begin to believe in the reality of the major character.
(Has there ever been, in the last decade, a top American
physicist who couldn’t speak even a word of German?) Even
in the film’s best moments the Gromek sequences in the
beginning, and the camera’s stop-action during the dance
of the ballerina toward the end
there is no originality;
only a re-doing of what Hitchcock has done successfully in
the past. Prior to Torn Curtain, even in Hitchcock’s worst
films, there was always a momentary glimpse of his originality, some redeeming quality. Even in Mamie, one could
point to the opening sequences of changing perspective, on
the shot of the heroine riding off on horseback into an
artificial set of back-projection.
Finally, one wonders what it is that Hitchcock was
trying to get at thematically in Torn Curtain. It is not merely
a spy story. On one level, it is a put-down of American
scientists (one of the most attractive characters in the film
is the East German scientist Gustave Lindt) and the methods
of American science; on another, it is a put-down of international espionage in general. Ultimately, it would seem that
Hitchcock wants to make some comment about fascism from
a historical perspective (the death of Gromek, the shot of
Otto Preminger moving across the frame halfway through
the film). But explication by no means equals evaluation,
and I’ll leave it to the auteur critics who feel that Hitchcock
can do no wrong to sort out the muddled “meanings.” For
me, the attempt by Hitchcock to impose Significance is
doomed from the start unless it grows organically from
the film. In Torn Curtain it does not.
In this film, Lila Kedrova’s performance, an unconscious
parody of her achievement in Zorba The Greek, serves as
a microcosm for Hitchcock’s unconscious parody of his earlier brillance. It is especially true of Hollywood, that by
the time a director has the “name” to be in a financial
Huston, Ford,
position to do what he wishes in ms films
Hawkes, and Hitchcock, cases in point his talent has been
dissipated.
-

Research Grants Total $9.3 Million;
Include Water Symposium Conference
A potpourri of scientific and
engineering research unmatched
in the history of the State University at Buffalo pushed total
research expenditures during
1965-66 past the $9 million mark.
An estimated $9,300,000 was
expended during the year by
more than 40 departments at the
University who receive funds
from federal, state and private
sources. Several of the grants
received by the University will
have a major .effect on the
Niagara Frontier.
The most publicized and talked
about program at the University
during the year was a national
water symposium held in June.
Water experts from throughout
the United States and Europe
attended the week-long conference which was entitled, “The
Fresh Water of New York State:
Its Conservation and Use.”
More than 60 experts discussed
in detail the many facets of to-

day’s water problem before 250
attended the conference. The symposium was
sponsored by the New York State
Science and Technology Founda-

persons who

tion and the Buffalo section of
the American Society of Civil
Engineers. Comments were heard
by Senator Edward Muskie (D.
Maine) and Gov. Nelson Rockefeller during the meeting.
Lake Erie is the subject for
study through an $118,000 three
by Dr.
year grant received
Ralph R. Rumer, acting head of
the Department of Civil Engineering. Dr. Rumer will construct
a model of the lake in order to
study the “dynamic behavior and
mixing processes” of the lake.
The School of Medicine again
topped all other Schools in research expenditures with an
setimated $4.8 million being
spent during the year. Studies
concerning air pollution, prevention of mental retardation, underwater breathing and a multitude of other programs highlighted the year’s activities. The
School’s programs on an international level continued with assistance being again provided to
the University of Asuncion in
Paraguay. Faculty members from
the School are serving on the
faculty in Paraguay and several
visitors from the Paraguayan

School studied the operations of
the University’s School of Medicine during the year.
The College of Arts &amp; Sciences
passed the $1,500,000 mark in research expenditures with the Department of Biology continuing
to lead the other departments
in the College with an estimated
$600,000 spent during the year.
The Department of Psychology,
with an estimated $Vi million
spent on research, is one of the
few in the country using “behavior therapy” in assisting emotionally disturbed persons. As
opposed to the traditionally analytical approach to mental problems, the psychologists believe
an individual can solve his problem through a relaxation-conditioning technique.
Everywhere at the University,
research continues at an unprecedented rate. The physiologists,
the psychologists, the engineers,
the doctors, the biologists, the
chemists, and the researchers
continue to add new information
to man’s ever growing body of
knowledge. An endless job, they
are united in a common goal—benefiting mankind.

-

-

-

Jerry Lewis’ new film Three on a Couch can now be
seen in this area. For those of you who haven’t seen a Jerry
Lewis film in years, and who are wondering what all the
critical acclaim for him is about, I recommend this film.
Lewis is weakest when he aims at a Chaplinesque kind of
pathos, and too often he does just that. But if he finally
accepts the fact that he is in the tradition of Fatty Arbuckle
and W.C. Fields, and aims at “pure” comedy, he will produce
a masterpiece. Outside of The Nutty Professor, Three on a
Couch is his best film.
As of the first week in August, the best film in Buffalo
is Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf. In his first directorial
effort, Mike Nichols proves that he is indeed an accomplished talent. From beginning to end Nichols is in complete control of the film. He knows exactly what he wants
to do, then, like an old pro who’s been at it for a decade,
with strength and with a deft
goes ahead and does it
subtlety. The acting is excellent, especially Richard Burton’s.
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf is a perfect example of how
a good stage play can be turned into a fine motion picture.
-

FINAL SOFTBALL STANDINGS

The SPECTRUM
Publilhad by

Partners Press, 3nc.
4ifol!

&amp;

SmilL

Prielie,

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

•5V

(•*

Psychology
Chemistry
Physics
Nuclear Center

Education
Biology
English

Admissions

&amp;

Rec

W L
7
1
6 2
4

4
3
3
1
1

3

3
4
4

6
6

Delaware)

Play-off game for first place
Psychology 4, Chemistry 1.

Committee for an Urban Campus
Names Robert Coles Chairman
Robert Traynham Coles, a local
architect and urban planner, has
been chosen chairman of the
Committee for an Urban Campus,
a group comprised of the business
and professional community dedicated to locating the new
SUNYAB campus on the downtown Waterfront area site.
Other officers include: Vice
Chairmen, Donald Ross (a UB
alumnus), Lewis Harriman, Jr.,
and Max Clarkson; secretary, Marvin Bloom, Assistant Professor of
Social Welfare here; treasurer,
Dr. Harry Sultz; and counsel, Carl
Green.
Also chosen were three members for the Committee’s execu-

live board. They are Alan A.
Korn, president of the BroadwayFillmore Merchants Association
and president of Sattler’s Inc.,
Robert B. Robinson, secretary of
the Forest District Civic Association, and the Rev. Robert Moore,
minister of Covenant Lebanon
Presbyterian Church. A fourth
executive board member, Stephen
Crafts, graduate student here, will
act as temporary representative
from the Campus Planning Committee.
Coles .indicated last Monday
that he had received “a communication from the Governor’s office encouraging the committee
to continue its efforts to develop

data for locating UB in the Buffalo waterfront-downtown sector.”
Coles said that the communication from Gov. Rockefeller "is
regarded by the committee as an
official blessing by the Governor
to continue our efforts.”
Rockefeller received a telegram from the Committee on
August 8 urging him to suggest
a review of the site decision with
particular consideration of the
downtown site as an alternative.
The Governor’s letter to Samuel
Gould, president of the State University, indicates that Rockefeller
has carefully considered the Committee’s request and statement of

Prof. Smith in

A Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science and the American
Anthropological Association, Dr.
Smith also holds membership in
the Linguistic Society of America, the Society for General Semantics, the College English
Association and the Canadian
Linguistic Association.

Dr. Copans is visiting professor
in the Department of Modern
Languages at the University this

'Forum Lectures'
A State University at Buffalo
professor is among 25 leading
American scholars in linguistics
chosen to participate in a series
of Voice of America “Forum Lectures” which will be broadcast
throughout the world.
Dr. Henry L. Smith, Jr., Professor of English and Linguistics,
will tape-record his paper entitled
“Language and the Total System
of Communication” for the series,
which is being coordinated by
Dr. Archibald A. Hill of the University of Texas. In addition to
being broadcast, the lectures will
be published individually by the
U.S. Information Agency and then
brought together in a book under
the title “Linguistics Today” for
publication by Basic Books.
The lectures are aimed at demonstrating to the world the current status of linguistics in the
United States. They are grouped
under the following headings:
“Nature of Language,” “Languages and History,” “Language
and Linguistics in the Classroom,”
“Linguistics and Other Disciplines,” “Linguistics and the
Machine” and “Schools of Linguistics in the Current Scene.”
Dr. Smith received his A.B.
summa cum laude from Princeton
University in 1935. His M.A. and
Ph.D. degrees were also awarded
by Princeton in 1937 and 1938
respectively. He has taught at
Barnard College, Brown University, Indiana University, and Harvard University.

Fellows Chosen
For Paris School
Six State University at Buffalo
professors have been honored as

the first Fellows of the Institute
of American Studies in Paris for
the 1966-67 academic year:
Dr. Joseph I. Fradin, assistant
profesor of English, on sabbatical
in England and France; Dr. Edwin
P. Hollander, professor of psychology, on a Senior Stipend
Award from the National Institute of Mental Health, who will
be in London; Dr. Marcus N.
Klein, associate professor of English, on a Fulbright Fellowship
to the University of Toulouse,
Toulouse, France. Dr. Edward C.
Lambert, professor of pediatrics,
on sabbatical to Lausanne, Switzerland; and Professor Allen R.
Sigel, professor of music, who
will be travelling throughout Europe on sabbatical
According to Dr. Simon Copans,
director of the Paris Institute, it
is expected that some of the fellows will lecture in classes there,
or meet with French colleagues
in their fields through the informal auspices of the Institute.

position.

summer.

Of the fellows program, which
is being inaugurated this year,
Dr. Copans said, “one of the accessory effects of the program
will be the establishment of a
close and mutually beneficial relation between the French academic community and faculty
members of the State University’s
college and University Centers.”

'Dream of Unity'
Released Today
The controversial subject of
Pan-Africanism and political unification in West Africa is analyzed in a soon to be published
book by a State University at
Buffalo assistant professor of political science. Drum of Unity
by Dr. Claude E. Welch, Jr., 346
Hendricks Blvd., Eggertsville, will
be released August 19 by Cornell
University Press.
The book examines the success
of Pan-Africanism in West Africa
by studying four such attempts to
unite French and English speaking states. The examples selected
by Dr. Welch include the Cam-

Federal Republic, a successful instance of political unification, and three cases in which
eroon

Pan-Africanism failed to bring
about political unity: Ghana-Togo,
Senegambia, and the Union of
African States formed by Ghana,
Guinea and Mali.

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f|44

U III

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
VOLUME 16

•

NO. 56

•

FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1966

Campus Planning Committee to Discuss
Student Participation in Site Decision
A new campus group, the Campus Planning Committee, will
hold its first meeting on Monday
evening, August 15, at 8 p.m. in
the Conference Theatre to discuss student participation in the
planning and development of the
new SUNY campus.

The group will work with an
existing organization, Committee
for an Urban Campus, by placing
one student representative on the
Committee’s executive board. An-

other member of the executive
board, Mr. Robert Coles, a local
architect and city planner, will

M. Sgt. Giambrone

address the Monday night meeting. He will explain what actions
his Committee has already taken
and will answer questions about

campus planning.
Following Mr. Cole’s portion of

the program, the Campus Planning Committee will propose that
the meeting establish some form
of organization to include the for-

mation of various interrelated
subcommittees on student participation in planning and develop-

ment.
According to a CPC spokesman,
“the primary purpose of the
group is

to get students involved

in a reconsideration of the Amherst site with the possibility of
locating the new campus on the
downtown waterfront area as part
of an urban redevelopment program. Whether the campus finally locates in Amherst or Buffalo,
the Campus Planning Committee
feels that students and faculty
should take an active part in the
planning and development of the
new campus.”

The meeting will be open to
the public. All interested students and faculty members are
especially urged to attend.

charged with assault

UB Student Involved In Creative Vandalism League Strikes;
'Unheard of' Legal Case Plants Trees in Parking Lot Sites
.

On Monday, August 15, at 9:30
a.m. in Part 1 of City Court, Detective Sergeant Samuel Giambrone will appear in answer to a
subpoena signed by Judge Mazur
on a charge of third degree assault. The charge was initiated
by William Sander, a graduate
student here and summer employee of the Erie County Department
of Social Welfare. Charges of
disorderly conduct against Sander were dismissed last Monday
in the same court.

The case began at the end of
last Saturday’s Peace March. Mr.
Sander said that “throughout the
demonstration the police, with
the exception of Detective Giambrone, performed admirably and
protected the marchers from
hecklers representing neo-fascist
groups who had followed us shouting anti-semetic remarks.”
Sander continued, “I was standing just off the sidewalk, between
the sidewalk and a fence in front
of a private home on Busti Avenue on the grass. An individual
in a business suit came over and
ordered me ‘off the sidewalk.’ I
replied that I was not on the side-

walk but on the grass. He then
looked down, saw that I was indeed on the grass, and said, ‘get
off of the grass
that’s private
property.’ Having no alternative
I asked, ‘Where then do you want
me to stand?’ The reply was,
you refuse
‘Alright, wise guy
to move—you’re under arrest.’
Sander said that he had no way
of being sure that the “man in
the business suit” was an officer
of the law. He said that the arrest occurred soon after the same
officer was observed talking with
“a group of Fascists in a station
wagon who had shouted such slogans as ‘Kill the Jews’ and ‘To the
Ovens’ at the marchers.”
—

—

”

Sander said that he was pushed
and shoved, into the' police car.
In the process he received a severe head injury which later required emergency care at the
Buffalo General Hospital. Mr.
Sander has charged the arresting
officer, Giambrone, with third degree assault for the infliction of
this wound. He was reluctant to
talk about the incident when interviewed, feeling it “might prejudice the upcoming assault case.”
Sander added, “The police were
wrong to make allegations about
how I sustained this injury while
I was in jail, but I do not intend
to commit the same error in
judgment.”

While in the police car, Sander

.

.

said that one of the officers asked.
“If you don’t like it here, why
don’t you leave?” Another, according to Sander, said, “What’s
a graduate student in sociology
doing hanging around with all
these reds?”
Mr. Sander gave the following
picture of his booking at the
police department on the charge
of “sidewalk blocking”: “I was
booked. All my personal property was taken from me. Detectives
were copying all the information
from my wallet
I could see
my social security numthem
ber, my addresses, my local draft
board number, my insurance
agent’s name, etc. They even took
away my wedding ring and eyeglasses. I was not allowed any
telephone calls.”
Sander was locked up and was
initially refused medical attention for his head wound. He was
eventually released on $100.00
bail, posted in cash by a friend.
According to a lawyer contacted
by this reporter, the maximum
fine on a charge of “sidewalk
blocking” is $5.00.
Once released, Sander said, one
doctor refused to attend him because the injury was “inflicted by
the police.” He then received
treatment at the Buffalo General
...

...

A group calling itself the Creative Vandalism League staged a
plant-in last Tuesday evening in
the parking lot construction area
near the Main Street entrance to
the campus. Proclaiming that
"Trees are a Reality Kick," the
group planted a number of tree
saplings, each of which bore a
dedicatory label.
Among the labels, a Spectrum
reporter who was dispatched to
the scene by an anonymous tip,
found the following:
1.) The Mother Tree
"This
tree is planted in appreciation of
the billions of mothers who have
made the joy of life a possibility
for millions more regardless of
—

race, creed, or national origin.”
2.) The God Tree
“This tree
is planted in memory of the kindly old gentleman who first
thought of trees and men and
who would undoubtedly have
wished to be present at this planting.”
3.) The Tree Tree
“This tree
is planted in memory of millions
—

—

of its brothers whose lives have
been snuffed out by thoughtless
waste in such enterprises as gun
butts and parking lots.”
4. The American Tree “This
tree is planted in the hope that
America may become as healthy
a place to live in as the forest."
5. The Apple Pie Tree
“This
—

—

—

death be loosed upon the world
and all our woe.”
7. Let Each Become All He Is
Capable of Being Tree
“This
tree is planted in the hope that
it will be able to become all it is
capable of being."
As of Wednesday morning, construction on the parking lots had
obliterated the trees. The campus
waits the reaction of the Creative
Vandalism League.
—

Jack Benny Visits Campus
Jack Benny arrived on the
State University at Buffalo campus on Wednesday to pay a visit
to an old friend and wound up
playing Mozart’s “Eine Kleine
Nacht Musik.”

Theater near Niagara Falls, had
called Schneider on the phone
and promised he would try to
meet with him and the young
musicians.
Tom Suarez, a 15-year-old from
Valley Stream’s Central High, and
The old friend was Alexander
student of Mrs. Louise Behrend,
who teaches at Juilliard’s preparSchneider, violinist of Buffalo’s
Budapest String Quartet, who is atory division, had a camera
handy, and managed to take some
teaching the University’s Baird
pictures of B e n n y’s visit, Mr.
Youth Chamber Players, comprised of students who have come Suarez recalls that “Mr. Benny
Hospital.
for instruction from all parts of said that everybody in the chamIn court last Monday, the Asthe State this summer.
ber group is better than he is,
District
Attorney, Mr. Miincluding the clarinet player who
sistant
that
a
chael McMorrow, asked
Benny’s visit was a complete starts learning the violin tomorcharge of disorderly conduct” surprise to the youngsters and
row. But we don’t have a clarbe substituted for the “sidewalk even Schneider hadn't planned on
inetist.”
blocking” charge. The presiding the performance. Jack took the
Alexander Schneider told the
judge agreed. The new charge concert master’s chair to join the
young group that Mr. Benny takes
was dismissed later in the day students in playing the Mozart
playing the violin very seriously,
by Judge Mazur.
piece.
practicing an hour every day.
“He has done more to further
He borrowed Schneider’s famIn seeking a warrant against
Giambrone, Sander said he was ous Guanerius for the occasion. the cause of good music in the
United States than any other enTuning the violin he asked the
sent “all around the police headquarters and that pressure was girl next to him to give him an tertainer,” he continued.
Mr. Schneider recalled that he
exerted to try and dissuade me “A." She did, and he responded
had the pleasure of introducing
against asking for prosecution of with a “B” flat. “Well, that’s close
Jack Benny and Isaac Stern when
Giambrone on the assault charge." enough,” he said.
The comedian, who is in Bufthe two men did a benefit perSander said that “Judge Mazur
pormance in New York’s Carwas very cooperative throughout falo doing a show at Melody Fair
the day.”
The Judge said that in order to
have a charge of disorderly conduct a “breach of the peace” must
be shown. Since the police did
not show a ‘breach of the peace,"
the charge was not warranted. Assistant District Attorney McMorrow expressed the feeling that
such a ruling will hamper police
work in the future.
Mr. Sander commented that he
“expects the police to issue a
third charge, since the first two
were dismissed. I have the aid
of the American Civil Liberties
(Cont’d on Pg. 2)

tree is planted in appreciation for
the apple tree, without which no
apples would grow and hence no
apple pies would be made.”
6. The Tree of Knowledge
“DO NOT DISTURB THIS TREE
IN ANY MANNER lest sin and

negie Hall in 1965 to

for Israel.

raise funds

Mr. Benny invited the entire
group and the staff of Baird Hall,

which houses the University's
Music Department, to be his
guests Saturday at Melody Fair.
Lou Fisher, Melody Fair's manager, was in the room at the time.
“Is that all right, Lou?” Benny
asked.
“I guess so."
Benny's manager came in and
said, “It's going to cost you about
$12,000, Jack."
Benny replied, "Well, what's
money to me—WHAT? $12,000?"
Benny and Schneider had a few
moments to chat during the visit.
At one point, Benny asked Schneider for Pablo Casals’ address,
which the violinist gave him.
Before leaving the musicians to
meet with the mayor of Buffalo,
Benny expressed regret that he
would not have the opportunity
to hear the group in their premier performance. Plans have
been made to present him with
a recording of the concert when
the group goes to see him at
Melody Fair Saturday night

Jack Benny playing Mozart with campus orchestra

�Friday, August 12, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Interview with French Students
The Cold War, the war in Viet
Nam, and European unity were
among the topics discussed by a
group of French students in a
recent interview with the Spectrum.

“Three Frenchmen; four opinions,” was the way one of the
students summarized the discussion. In general ways, however,
they were in agreement: skeptical
of the Cold War, opposed to the
Viet Nam war, and eager for
European unity.

Hecklers Spice CNVA March
Last Saturday’s CNVA Hiroshima Day Peace Walk was described by members of the Committee as a “success.” 65 people

marched 14 miles in protest of
the war in Vietnam and the massive arms race. The only incident
of violence occurred when William Sander, a walker, was arrested by Dct. Sgt. Samuel Giambrone on a charge of “blocking
a sidewalk” and was thrown
forcefully against a police car,
injuring his head.

The Walk moved quickly
throughout the city, covering the

entire distance from the UB campus to the Peace Bridge in 4 Vi
hours. A statement addressed to
President Johnson was read at
the Bridge by David Gardiner,
Graduate Student in Sociology
and a member of the Committee.
When presentation of the statement to the Head American Cus-

toms Official, Charles Wilson, was
attempted, Mr. Wilson replied,

“I have orders not to accept this
statement.” The statement will be
mailed to Mr. Wilson, Pres. Johnson, Senators Javits and Kennedy,
and local congressmen.

Constant surveillance was provided by the Buffalo Subversive
Squad, the FBI, and the South
Park Fascist Club, under the direction of Mr. Robert Johnson.
Mr. Johnson, representative of
the Fascist Club, drove a station
wagon spiced with signs reading
“Onward Viet Terror Squad
Kill Cong,” and “Death to UB
Communists.” The car carried a
bomb on its roof. Johnson made
the Walk all the more meaningful by yelling such choice phrases as “Jews! Jews! Show me a
Jew Commie and I’ll show you a
faggot!” Marchers did not answer
Mr. Johnson.
—

SUNY Library Institute
To Be Held Here Next Week

The third annual institute of
the SUNY division of Library
Extension will be held on the
Buffalo campus this year from
August 15-19. This year’s institute, under the direction of Mrs.
Margia W. Proctor, former Deputy Director of the Buffalo and
Erie County Public Library, will
be entitled “Planning the Library
Building.”

The five day institute will focus
on the principles and procedures
for planning small public librar-

Mmtal hotardadon
Workshop Continues
A two week Advanced Work-

shop in Mental Retardation goes
into its second week today. The
Workshop, under the direction of
Dr. Egan Ringwall of the Psychological Clinic, began last Friday
and will continue to August 19.

The Workshop includes a brief
historical review of the field of
retardation, a discussion of the
criteria for retardation, the use
of diagnostic and measurement
procedures, and training programs for the retarded.
The emphasis of the Workshop
will be the significance of recent
research on the psychological aspects of retardation. Guest speakers have been invited to discuss
current developments in their
areas of professional specialization.
PEACE CORPS
PLACEMENT TEST

A Peace Corps placement test
will be given on August 13 at 9
a.m. in the Federal Office Building, Room 432, 121 Ellicott Street.
Applicants must fill out a Peace
Corps application which is available at all Post Offices and The
Peace Corps. Washington, D.C.
20526 1/ application has not been
submitted yet, bring it to the test

with you.

ies. Local architects will be available for guest presentation and

be provided
for the discussion of specific
planning problems faced by participants. Field trips have been
arranged so that participants may
observe and study a number of
interesting new libraries in the
opportunities will

area.

Fees for the institute include
$50 for tuition and an additional
$13 if dormitory housing is desired. Participants will otherwise
be responsible for their own housing and meals.

lest IVe Forget'
Auditions for “Lest We Forget . .
the third annual President John F. Kennedy Memorial
Show, will be held on ‘Monday,
Aug. 15, 7 to 10 p.m., in Room
233, Norton Hall.
Proceeds from the show sponsored by the College Young Democrats will go to the J.F.K. Me-

One question concerned the recent statement in the press that
“De Gaulle is the first major
statesman to realize that the Cold
War is over.” Most of the students agreed with this analysis,
stating that Russia’s economic

progress had lessened its threat
to the West. “Nobody believes
Russia will try to expand into
Europe,” one explained.

Another added, “we have per-

haps 20 or 30 dangerous years”
before China arrives at a level
of prosperity sufficient to raise

it from “the first militant stage
of Communism.”
On Viet Nam, the students felt
the majority of French people
are against the war. The reasons
for this opposition are varied,
they agreed. While leftists would
oppose U.S. involvement as counter-revolutionary, the most frequent objection is that the war
seems a “useless and hopeless”
repetition of the French defeat
in Indochina in 1954.
One student who knows many
Vietnamese people in France
pointed out that the Vietnamese
are a very patient nation and
are willing to hold out indefinitely, perhaps 30 years or more. He
questioned whether American resolve could stand up against the

UB Student...
(Cortt’d

from P.

X)

Union in my defense,” he added,
“and I intend to see this thing
through.”
A spokesman for the American
Civil Liberties Union said that,
to her knowledge, a charge of
assault against a police officer
was “unheard of in Buffalo.”
Mr. Manguso, Corporation Counsel for the City of Buffalo, concurred with that statement. Manguso said that such a case was
“not common, but extraordinary.”
He added, “the case has raised
bitterness among the members of
the police department. The event
in question occurred in the
course of the officer’s duty and
the city will provide legal aid
for Officer Giambrone.” Mr. Manguso commented that charges of
police assault are serious and
should be examined fully before
an officer is brought into court.

Asian long view of history. “They
are,” he added, “a different civilization but an accomplished civilization.”
Another student added that
many of the South Vietnamese
welcomed, at first, American involvement in fighting Communism, but now “all they want is
peace, peace at any cost.”

Asked to compare the difficulty
for the U.S. in possibly leaving
Viet Nam without decided victory with France’s problems in
leaving Algeria, the students
found some validity in this but
agreed, “the only comparison is
in the question of power and
prestige.”

The situation in Viet Nam, one

explained, is not that of retaining a colony but of “showing the
Communists that the guerrillas
cannot win.” All of them agreed,
however, that an American victory in Viet Nam would have no
effect on halting guerrilla movements throughout the world.

To the question whether world
public opinion is going against
the United States now, they answered unanimously, “yes”, finding only “the extreme right elements” in Europe in favor of the
war. One objected that this opposition had, so far, taken the
form of "sentiments but no actions” and

another added

that

European opinions were much influenced by the anti-war stand of

their newspapers.
Comments on President De
Gaulle were as diverse as the
controversy surrounding the
French President.

The students spoke of defects
in the French constitution and
were of the opinion that as a
strong personal leader with basically democratic tendencies, De
He felt that Judge Mazur had

“acted

hastily.”

Sander said that “my case is
important. In my experience as
a case worker for the Erie County
Department of Social Welfare, I
have come across a number of
cases where police have acted
improperly. This case may help
end such practices.”

Gaulle compensated for these
faults. But they agreed that another President with dictatorial
ambitions could take advantage
of the wide and loosely-defined
powers of the French Presidency.

Opinion was divided on whether De Gaulle is doing everything
in his power to achieve European
unity. Some of the students believed that De Gaulle’s nationalism has obstructed the growth
of a supranational Europe. AH
of them agreed that European
unity is a necessity. “It’s not a
question of balance,” (against the
U.S. and the U.S.S.R.) one said.
“It’s only a question of power. If
you want to survive in the mod-

ern world you must have some
power.”

“It will be much more in the
interest of the United States to
have a Europe with some
strength,” said one student. Several felt that an independent
French atomic deterrent has only
propaganda value for France, and
that only slightly, whereas a united European deterrent, independent of the U.S., would have some
credibility.

Economic benefits were seen as
equally or more important than
political strength as a reason for
European unity.
Students in France are much
more aware, involved, and sophisticated in politics than most of

their American counterparts, it

was agreed. The diversity of political parties and ideologies, and
the ease of traveling to neighboring countries, they said, make
political involvement more at
tractive to Europeans. They found
a considerable lack of political
diversity and a lack of tolerance

of dissident ideas in the United
States.

It was learned that Mr. Sander
has resigned from the Social Welfare Departemnt effective Friday,
August 12. The reasons for his
resignation were unavailable.
However, Deputy Welfare Commissioner William Hawthorne indicated that the publicity surrounding the case was harmful
to the department.

Swiss Chalet
1551 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

643 MAIN STREET

(Next to Twin Fair)
(Opp. Shea's Buffalo)
Open Daily 11a.m. to 4 a.m.

Specializing in Charcoal Broiled Chicken
Reasonably Priced

—CONVENIENT TAKE-OUT AND DELIVERY SERVICEPRIVATE BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE

TF 7-4300

TL 2-0008
Downtown

Boulevard

morial Library at Cambridge.

A few openings remain for students talented in speaking, solo
instrumentals, ballet, or solo
yocal. Call Mary Guilfoyle, 833-

5&amp;H for further information.

LEONARDO'S
FINE FOOD

&amp;

DRINK

GROTTO BAR
UNIVERSITY PIAZA

Old Post Road

Inn
Main at Highgata

LUNCHEONS
11:45 until 3:00
DINNERS
5 p.m. until 10 p.m.
SUPPERS
10 p.m. until 1 p.m

$ee
WE CAN FILL YOUR HOMETOWN
COMPLETE LINE OF ALMAY
—

ATMOSPHERE

—

—

RUSTCRAFT GREETING CARDS
Prescription and Non-Prescription Drugs
Phone: 835-1663
835-3233
Please show your Student ID Card when making purchases
—

572 Amherst

PRESCRIPTIONS
COSMETICS

�Friday, August 12, 1966

PACE THREE

SPECTRUM

Notes on Urban Campus
Ed. Nota: Instead of a SPECTRUM
position paper on the advisability
of locating the new SUNY campus in the downtown Buffalo waterfront area, we feel it more appropriate at this time to present
a statement by the Committee for
an Urban Campus, an article by
SPECTRUM staff reporter, Michael D'Amico, and a letter by
Dr. Lyle Glazier. The SPECTRUM
hopes that the debate on the issue
of the campus location has not
closed, despite President Gould's
peremptory statement reprinted

in last week's issue.

The Committee for an Urban
Campus is a grassroots organization comprised of citizens from
academic, business, medical, religious, and political communities
of the area which seeks to have
the new campus located in the
downtown area. Parts of a statement the Committee has already
sent to Martin Myerson, presidentdesignate of this campus and Dr.
Samuel Gould, President of the
SUNY, are reprinted here. This

is the first time this statement
has appeared in public in any
form. The article by Michael
D’Amico is based on both independent research and study of the
original Vincent Moore site analysis and the statement of the
Committee for an Urban Campus.
Dr. Glazier, Professor of English
here, wrote his letter to the Buffalo Evening News of August 2,
1966. We reprint it here with his
permission. He has expressed
what we also feel regarding the
location of the new campus.

ments clarify the nature of the
university purposes, they may
then be admitted as points of
reference against which specific
procedures involving the university may be evaluated. Without
belaboring the point, it is evident
that, from the university’s perspective, little virtue can attach
to any operation prejudicial to
its primary purposes—no matter

how virtuous the endeavor may
some other viewpoint. Of the most absolute im-'**
appear from

portance: no university can long
survive as the pawn or tool of
special political, social or other
interest—and its sources of financial support are irrelevant to

this issue.

Turning to S.U.N.Y. at Buffalo,
everyone agrees with its aspirations toward greatness. However,
certain fundamental points must
be made clear:
1. SUNY is an aspirant university hopeful of assuming a position among the great institutions
of this country. As such, its perspectives cannot remain local.
Put bluntly, the university cannot
be a panacea for this community’s
problems!

setting (and of most others) is standing with respect to the urban
becoming increasingly enfeebled, complex. It might inspire imaginand scant reason exists which ative minds to seek ways and
provides hope for improvement. means of restructuring the urban
Such a state of affairs leads to complex. In essence, the situating
frustration on the part of the of a university within the heart
local political mechanisms, be- of an urban complex might procause these mechanisms are ap- vide stimulation for the solution
parently impotent in the face of of many bewildering problems of
complex problems and surging the urban setting by minds of taltendencies which do not seem ent, imagination and intellectual
responsive to local political strat- curiosity. In the instance of Bufegems or aspirations.
falo, a situation exists which may
At the moment, Buffalo, under be especially propitious for a
a new administration, is speaking fruitful confrontation. This is so
bravely and hopefully of acting because the -size or scale of this
upon many of its most pressing urban area is still compassable.
problems. Therefore, it would All the usual urban problems—appear that both the local leaders decay, fiscal hardships, transit,
in the public and the private sec- ghettoes, etc.—exist here in a size
tors are interested in and desir- and scale which remain manageous of hearing fresh voices and able.
new approaches.
In sum, placing the university
SUNY is at the threshold of in the center of the urban comexpansion and is entering a periplex will not do violence to its
od of new, vigorous and changed scholarly tradition. Such placeleadership. These two factors may ment might, however, add a ditogether provide inspiration for mension of relevance and pertinnew and exciting attempts to deal ency to the university’s traditionwith common interests and conal role and function. This indeed
may provide the university with
cerns.
Several aspects of this matter the challenge to use its traditions
ought to be clearly understood. of learning, scholarship and research in fresh ways to deal with
problems unique to an urbanized,
technological society.
The city in its efforts to pro-

vide all of its citizens with the
benefits of a civil society may
find in the University a model
and mentor to turn to for sources
of knowledge and inspiration. The
local political mechanism may
discover the connections between
themselves and wider sources of
influences and political activity.
No longer will political views be
confined to local capacities, isolated from wider sources. Rather,
understanding of local political
potentialities within the broad
context of the urban society may
come to predominate. That there
are benefits for the University
that can derive from such an
urban condition goes without

Statement of
Committee for

Urban Campus
Introduction
A university, like any organization, is specialized and responsible for the performance of definable social functions. In the large
societal scheme of things, these
functions may be broad and basic,
but they are nonetheless limited.
Put simply, no organization—not
even a university—can be all
things to all men. And the more
vital an organization’s primary
societal functions, the more unfortunate are likely to be the
consequences of its trying to be.

A university exists as a means
for acquiring, codifying, storing
and disseminating knowledge. In
a university, unlike a school or
college perhaps, research and instructional functions are essentially co-equal. In fact, the scholarly function is definitive. It follows from this characterization
that a university, in its nature, is
universal rather than particular
in respect to the community it
serves. Its needs, interests and
objectives are neither common
with nor tied to those of its immediate host environs, except in
the most general sense. In short,
universities are “cosmopolitan”
rather than “local” in their perspectives. To be sure, they and
their host communities may derive direct mutual benefit, but
those benefits are primarily derivative, fortuitous and secondary.
None of these remarks is intended to preclude university derived or related community service. Indeed, in the modern era
universities have tended actively
to associate themselves with
“worldly” enterprises. The ivory
tower has acquired a revolving
door. However, a priority of purpose must be set so that the
postures and attitudes of university people may be understood
and so that the partial disjunction of community and university
perspectives may be appreciated.
If it be granted that these com-

question.

Map from Moore site analysis (1964) of downtown area.
sections indicate available land.

Shaded

Physical Features
Of Waterfront Area
By

MICHAEL L. D'AMICO

The Spactnww has gone on recSUNY is not in a position—nor ord in favor of a re-evaluation
should it, or can it be, placed in of the location for the new cama position— to be the salvation pus and has indicated a preferfor Buffalo or this urban area. ence
for the downtown waterfront
Also, Buffalo (and the urban site. This paper has chosen that
complex generally) cannot and position not just to cause conshould not rely upon a university, troversy, though controversy is
no matter what its size or presneeded. It has been chosen not
tige, for solutions to its problems. without justification, for after
There may be, however, at the reviewing the facts made availmoment, a congruence of interable and doing a considerable
ests which could be beneficial to
suburbs.
amount of independent research,
both.
Lest there be any misunderwe have found that the City of
standing, what follows is not an
This congruency can be convenBuffalo has a great deal to offer
iently
any
pardiscussed
the
conargument for or against
within
a university located on its watertext
of
locating the University in front.
ticular university site. What is
that
area
argued against are premises
Buffalo's waterfront
instead
would subordinate the interests of in Amherst.
Land Available
First, with regards to the Uniof the university to a confining,
The first consideration must be
conventionalized and excessively versity. Neither site is superior the amount of land available.
particularistic conception of “comin serving the ends of scholarThere is every indication that the
munity responsibility”. It is also ship, research and learning. And City could offer a more than
argued here that the university
neither site provides assurances sufficient amount of acreage for
cannot afford any further delay of greater academic quality the building of a large university.
in the creation of the new physachieved in a shorter time. These In fact, including land that could
assurances come from other conical facility.
be reclaimed from the Lake Erie
siderations than parcels of land. basin, the waterfront offers near
The University's Role
Locating SUNY on the waterly as much land as does the site
In The Urban Complex
front site may provide something, in Amherst. Anything that apBuffalo, in common with most
proaches 800 acres in an urban
urban areas, is faced with an
however, considerably more challenging and exciting than any setting simply must be considered
array of problems essentially not
specific quality. That is the opadequate.
of its own making, and apparently unresponsive to attempts to
portunity to realize the interNaturally, any campus built on
furnish solutions to the problems. action of an institution dedicated
the waterfront would be intensForces and actions occurring far
to the historic ideals, goals, valdeveloped, but many unifrom Buffalo frequently affect ues and aspirations of a great ively
versities
of equal or greater size
more
University, with an urban setting
the lives of its citizens
dithan
the
one projected here have
events
to
rectly than
originating in dedicated
maximizing the goals
been built in urban areas.
Buffalo. In the public sector, tne
and aspirations of a free society
all
its
for
residents.
local political structure retains
The new University of Illinois
an uncertain degree of control
Such an interaction would not Chicago Circle Campus for 20,000
over the direction Buffalo may
hinder the scholarly goals of the students will be built on a 123
University, and might enhance its acre downtown site. Cleveland
want (or need) to move; in the
pedagogical opportunities. Such has planned a new urban campus,
private sector, the degree oi conan interaction might provide new also for 20-WK) students, to be
trol locally situated is problematic. The viability of this urban
sources of insight and under built on a 200-acre waterfront
2. As SUNY moves further
along the road to greatness, it
move farther along the road to
cosmopolitanism.
3. Finally, universities tend to
create their own local communities. They are not dependent upon
cities or what not. Great universities are to be found in great
cities, but they are also to be
found in corn fields and even in

site. The Universities of Minnesota and Ohio State have added
proof to the feasibility of such
a project. Buffalo has the potential to offer considerably more
than any of these. In light of
these facts, it cannot be said
that the Buffalo waterfront is
too small for building our campus.

Soil and Drainage
When considering the technical
advantages of the waterfront location, the condition of the soil
and the problems of drainage
should be examined. Although
the shape of the area is irregular,
it is essentially level and there
are no adverse soil or subsurface
conditions that might hinder
building progress. Drainage would
be handled by the already existing sewer system of the City.
This is one hurdle that can be
eliminated in the waterfront area
while it looms rather large in
Amherst.
Cost

•!

Land

There can be little doubt that
the land in the waterfront area
will be fairly expensive. This expense, however, can be offset by
a number of factors. Urban renewal officials have indicated
that every effort would be made
to aid the university if it moves

downtown.

Close cooperation between the
City and the University would
result in large benefits accruing

from the federal government. In
other words, although it may cost
more to acquire and clear the
waterfront area, this higher price
would be offset by federal, state,
and municipal grants for the expansion of the campus as well as
aid for urban renewal.

It is quite possible that the City
would turn over all land to the
University in the area for a nominal sum since the credits obtained by the City under the
Urban Renewal Law for a project such as this could pay the
cost of the City's urban renewal
program for years to come.
Accessibility
A large university, serving the
needs of a large population,
should be located in an area that
is easily accessible for tha greatest part of the population. Although accessibility to the Amherst site is fairly good, the

lent. The site is located at the
center of the area expressway
network. The Thruway, the Skyway, the Scajaqwadi Expressway,
the Kensington Expressway and

the proposed West Side Arterial
would all facilitate (he movement
of traffic in and out of the water
front area.

The downtown site is served
by all major city and intercity
bus routes. The Greater Buffalo
International Airport is twelve

miles via expressway from the
location. The New York Central
Railroad Station is only two and
one-half miles away via local
streets. There is the possibility
of providing rail service direct
to the campus since the railroad
line runs adjacent to the Thruway.

All this adds up to a big plus
for accessibility to the downtown
site. Besides being centrally located, no commuter, from Niagara Falls or Clarence or Hamburg,
should have difficulty reaching
the waterfront and reaching it
quickly.
Supporting Facilities
Supporting facilities for the
waterfront campus are the best

in the entire Frontier. These facilities include utilities, commercial facilities, and cultural facilities. All major utilities serve the
waterfront area and there would

be no problems in providing any
(Cont’d on Pg. 4)

�Urban Campus

(Cont’d from Pg. 3)
network desired by the University. The Buffalo Police and Fire
Departments would also serve the
area.
Commercial facilities are abundant. The campus would be only
walking distance from the Buffalo
central business district. Several
large department stores, a great

number of smaller merchants,
many restaurants, and several hotels and motels would be adjacent
to the site.
The cultural facilities of the
immediate area are extensive and
could prove to be convenient for
and valuable to the University.
The main branch of the Buffalo
and Erie County Public Library,
which includes the Grosvenor
Research Library, is close at hand.
Also within walking distance are
the Studio Arena Theatre, Memorial Auditorium, and Kleinhans
Music Hall. There are several
hospitals in the area and these
could be made available for University use.
Only a short drive away from
the waterfront are the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery, the Zoological

Gardens, and the Historical Museum. Bordering the north side
of the proposed site would be
D’Youville College and the Connecticut Street Armory.
Employment and Housing
Employment opportunities for
the downtown campus would exceed anything that could be offered at the present campus or
any suburban setting. Nearness to
.

Friday, August 12, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Buffalo's main business district,
as well as City and County Government offices, is certain to result in a high degree of part-time
employment and off-campus training opportunities.
Housing availability could not

be better. Married student housing could be made available in
several nearby housing projects.
Many of the new apartment projects could certainly use the faculty housing market. It is also rewarding to find that unlike many
other urban university locations,

i

.

the waterfront site is not surrounded by blight. North and
northwest of the site is an extensive housing area, one of the
older sections of the City, which
remains in fairly good condition.
The University could only
enhance the area.
Natural Baauty and Climate
For all those who are concerned with the appearance of the
University, one last point must be
considered
the natural beauty
and climate of the waterfront
area. The setting for the waterfront university could be nothing
short of dramatic. The view from
the university would stretch from
the Buffalo skyline and Harbor
to Lake Erie and the Canadian
Shore. At dusk, the student could
watch the sun setting over the
Lake rather than over Ellicott
Creek and there can be little
doubt that a waterfront university would provide a beautiful
entrance for travelers coming into
the city.
As far as climate is concerned,
the only adverse condition would
be the occasional high velocity
prevailing westerly winds which
blow across the Lake. Architectural design and landscape planning could eliminate most of
those effects. These same breezes
prevail during the summer
months and they provide Buffalo
with a most attractive summer
climate.
Waterfront Technically Preferable
Reviewing all these objective
factors, we find the waterfront
site an exciting possibility for a
new campus. The land available,
its condition and cost, the accessability, the support facilities, the
employment opportunities, the
housing availability, the natural
beauty of the area—all these combine to lead to one undeniable
conclusion: technically, the downtown site is preferable to just
about any other. One would think
that any study made would buttress this assumption. The University, however, after its “careful study” has rejected the water—

wn hfi P

s

Jr
*

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|

/

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•

•

front. No one has offered sound
reasons why.
The waterfront seems receptive
to the building of a university
and indeed it should be. The University could perform a great
service to the City of Buffalo and,
as has been shown, the City can
provide the University with the
land and facilities any university
so dearly needs to become great.
The waterfront can be the setting
for a well-planned, well-equipped,
efficient, and certainly beautiful
university. This opportunity
should not be overlooked.

Glazier's Letter

It would be hard to conceive
of a letter missing the target
more completely than one recently from one of my colleagues
in the UB math department, deploring agitation to consider a
waterfront site for the university.

All the facts in the letter are
correct. In downtown Buffalo,

Phil Cook Defense Fund
Poetry Reading Today
“Total assault on the Goon
Squads!” Public poetry reading
scheduled for Friday, August 12
in Norton 231 from noon on!
Hanna will read his latest ZAPS
on AMERICANA in a final benefit performance before his peaceful departure from these shores.
Damon Runyon says GET THE
MONEY
this is for the Phil
Cook legal defense fund: Hanna
—

will bear down with the mathematics of love-rays on the subject of fleshless 38’s wielded
goon-harassers over the bed of
University’s Non-Violent, Fingermashed Steelworker. Come with
poems and pennies. Come prepared to help.
Come to be entertained by the
story of a member of our righteous citizenry snatched from his

•sw

ways.

This is your chance to enjoy
the principle of Pay TV .
don’t miss it. (A Paid Political
Announcement can destroy YOUR
boundaries! !)
.

.

UB Alumnus Believes
Obesity to Be Metabolic

the university would be surrounded by squalor, stench, smog, architectural chaos, and bisected by
the frenetic convenience of the
Thruway and the Skyway.
These are reasons for buildMany grossly overweight peoing there. Students and faculty ple are “literally born to become
should have their noses rubbed fat,” according to a State Uniin the ugliness that Buffalo has versity at Buffalo alumnus.
created, until the entire univerDr. Irving B. Perlstein, a 1939
sity adopts as its first business graduate of the University’s
the responsibility to affect its School of Medicine, believes that
surrounding society positively.
his findings have revealed a metaClasses in literature should be bolic cause for extreme obesity.
dumped in the slum, where they He has also developed what seems
can’t avoid seeing the correto be a successful treatment for
spondence between contemporary the condition.
novels and contemporary life.
His report, presented to an
Historians should never be allowAmerican Medical Society meeted to ignore where history has ing in Chicago, said that fat peobrought us. Sociologists should ple may have “blocking” antibe immersed in the urban culture bodies which prevent their bodies
which is now inseparable from from utilizing energy-releasing
American life. Educators should thyroid, even though the hormone
find it impossible to forget for a is released in normal quantities.
moment the 50% dropout in highIn a series of experiments coner education, based partly on the ducted with guinea pigs and rabfact that children of low-income bits, Dr. Perlstein discovered that
groups quickly discover the inthe annuals gradually increased
adequacy of a college which production of thyroid antibodies
makes only accidental relations when injected with thyroglobulin,
between their life and life on and subsequently became fat.
campus.
He said that this condition in
UB now has a choice—to build humans may be triggered by such
another pastoral ivory tower into experiences as the birth of a
which the fortunate many can child, a bone fracture, a psychic
retreat from the tragic chaos of problem or an operation. Studydowntown Buffalo. Or the campus
can be downtown, where it can
TENNIS TOURNAMENT
provide an example in its own
Craig Singerman won this
architecture, and where over the
Tennis
years it can take in and send out year’s Summer Sessions
Tournament by defeating Rudy
students so aware of Buffalo’s
I-a» Afi 6-3. 6-2. and Forrest
awful actuality and marvelous
McQuitty fin
potential—in short so in love with McQuitty, 64, 6-2.
downing Lee,
Buffalo
that Buffalo will be ished second by
6-2, 6-1, in the consolation round.
changed.
—

i^^s8

sick-bed and buried in the vaults
of Official Procedure Violated
Castle, unreachable for ten hours
while his flesh rotted, denied
sanction from pain, held in escrow aganist Infinite Public Bancruptcy, deprived his ghoulish
livelihood because of all Known
Means of Social Communication.
Hear tales of the Crime of the
Century and then the Crime of
the Millenium.
ON THE SPOT a marriage will
be celebrated, a member of the
Mafiosa will fly to Rome and
Queen Ann will work her wily

ing a group of 350 fat persons
of all ages, Dr. Perlstein found
that 90% of the patients with

blocking antibody problems recalled such experiences, and
could pinpoint the start of their
subsequent weight gain.

Dr. Perlstein’s treatment, the

administering of large doses of
the oral drug T-3, a synthetic
thyroid hormone, plus a diet low
in fats and carbohydrates, but
unrestricted in protein calories,
resulted in an average weight loss
of 15 to 20 pounds per month
among his patients with the blocking antibodies.

However, he stressed the need
for continual checkup of obese
patients by a physician to be
sure that no harmful effects follow the use of T-3. Unless some
better drug was discovered, he
said, T-3 dosage might be required throughout an obese person’s life to maintain the weight
balance.
Dr. Perlstein is currently associated with the University of
Louisville School of Medicine. He
is the author of a book entitled
Diet Is Not Enough.

—

MISCELLANEOUS
GIVING AWAY to good home—two kittens, 2% months old,
tiger

or

834-0251.

—

IK

M\f

BE?
ns
A

9'
w

K%
#»

:

M

He’s at HOWARDJOUtlfOnJ

FISH FRY
Tatty Boneless

Golden

Brown French Fried Potatoes ■ Cole
Slaw BTartareSauce"RollsandButter

£119
I

PERSONAL
I WILL SELL nearly all my belongings Saturday at noon at

125 Edward Street, Apt. 7. Car,
books, cases, couch, rugs, etc.
Tom Hanna.

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
ONE STOP SERVICE
CENTER
Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
Lanudry &amp; Drycleaning
ONE DAY SERVICE

University Plaza
TF 6-4041

*

WEDNESDAY A FRIDAY
Main, N. of Hertel

Two Locations:

Hamburgers
150
Chicken Dinner 790
-

-

Main Street &amp; Thruway
1205 Niagara Falls Blvd.

Watch for
New Concept
in

Eating Pleasure
Coming Soon!

�</text>
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                    <text>SUMMER
EDITION

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ment prepared by the Committee
will be read and presented to
American Customs officials. Cop-

ies of the statement will be sent
to President Johnson, Senators
Kennedy and Javits, local congressmen, Hanoi, and the National Liberation Front. The statement will be reprinted in next
week’s Spectrum.

Forty Canadians from Niagara
Falls, Ontario, will vigil on the
Canadian side of the Peace
Bridge. Several American peace
walkers will address the Canadian

rally.

Draper thinks that “the antiwar sentiment in this country and
around the world is growing. The
only way wars will ever cease is
for citizens to demonstrate to
their governments their opposition to war as a means of solving
political questions.”

CNVA invites those interested
in affirming their belief in peace
to participate in the Walk, either
for the entire distance or for
as long as possible. In the event
of extreme heat, CNVA will provide salt pills and beverages.
Transportation from the Peace
Bridge back to campus will also
be provided.

The following statement was
issued on August 3 by State University of New York President
Samuel B. Gould regarding expansion plans for the State University at Buffalo:
“It has been brought to my attention that some question has
been raised as to the intention of
State University to carry out its
announced decision of June, 1964,
to expand the State University of
New York at Buffalo into a new
campus in Amherst. I am in full
accord with this decision reached
by the State University trustees
and the Council of the University

at Buffalo after careful study. I
assure everyone concerned that
planning for the continued use of
the Main Street campus and for
the development of the Amherst
campus will be expedited as rapidly as all circumstances permit.
I hope that this statement will
put an end to any further speculation which can only do a disservice to the University, to the
people of Amherst who have
made us feel welcome and to

the thousands of students from
Western New York and all over
the State who need these educational facilities.”

An Editorial
N/l

K

V

M

S

T

K

-E.

E_

T0TM_

Reopen the Site Issue

T

:

157 CA.R.S

SCKLE.: l"«.

\00-O'

One expects more from the State University of New
York than President Samuel Gould’s statement regarding
the expansion plans of this campus. Dr, Gould’s statement
indicates that he is ignorant of the actual proceedings leading to the decision to build in Amherst. Gould also shows
a disturbing willingness to cut off debate on the issue, an
action completely inimical to the long university tradition
of inquiry and debate.
Gould states that he is “in full accord with this decision
[to locate the campus in Amherst] reached by the State

University trustees and the Council of the University of
Buffalo after careful study.” That Gould considers his
sources of information amenable to a “careful study,” only
indicates how uninformed he is on the whole issue. Reliable
sources cast doubt on his statement that the UB Council
ever debated the issue. And the State University Trustees
spent but one meeting (June 11, 1964) to approve the Amherst site unanimously. Certainly Dr. Gould cannot consider such facility to be the product of “careful study.” In
fact, the only careful study seems to have been the site
CK«
ToT\U ■
evaluation
of Vincent Moore from January to April of 1964.
OO
O
Moore
passed his report on, without recommendation, to a
Drawings showing locations of parking facilities to be completed
by September.
“central staff” headed by Dr. Lawrence Murray, now Vice
President of the State University system. It was Murray’s
committee that made the recommendation of the Amherst
site which the Trustees approved. Since the records of
Murray’s committee and the Trustee’s meeting have never
been made public, we can never know exactly why the
Parking facilities amounting to
that they would be temporary in Amherst site was chosen. All the arguments
presently being
over 600 additional spaces are “the sense that when this camproffered in the defense of the Amherst site are inadequate.
currently under construction or pus is converted into a Health
planned for completion by SepScience center, there will unJust last week, Dr. William O’Connor of the UB Foundation,
tember. Construction has begun doubtedly be changes."
on an expansion of the student
presumably making a policy statement for the State UniverAccording to Mr. Sarra the
lots on Main Street for 300 parksity, called both expansion to Grover Cleveland Park or the
University has needed the new
ing spaces. The parking lot in
lots ever since last year when
front of Capen Hall will also be
dowtown waterfront area “totally inadequate.” The reason
the Buffalo Fire Department comexpanded to accommodate sevgiven was that of “the scope of the project.” Any competent
eral more rows of faculty parkplained about parking in the roadways.
The
next
Sarra
that
Mr.
explained
medical-dental
lot
ing.
architect could build a campus on the area available in downto Capen Hall will be rearranged
this is especially a problem in
to provide for more student parkthe winter when the lot sizes are town Buffalo. The Universities of Minnesota, Illinois, and
reduced due to snow plowing.
ing.
Ohio State have amply proven that campuses of a size even
The State University will pay
greater than the one projected for here can be built in
parking
are
to
be
for
the
new
facilities
out
New lots
scheduled
built in the circle at the Main of monies set aside for “rehabilurban areas. Available land is not a good argument and,
itation.” ABC Contractors have
Street entrance to the campus
and along the west lawn of Hayes been retained in an agreement after close scrutiny, should fool no one.
-•WO

ViXOwTY

o-t_-wv«.T\-VC,MT

:

At the Peace Bridge, a state-

NO. 55

Gould Scotches
Location Debate

CH.OS6Y

RR
I

Anarchism and Th#
(See Page 8&gt;

7^

The Buffalo chapter of the
Committee for Non-violent Action
(CNVA) will hold its first major
independent action tomorrow in
the form of a Hiroshima Day
Peace Walk. According to Will
Draper, a spokesman for the
group formed last spring by UB
pacifists, the Walk will be held
for “the dual purposes of protesting United States’ involvement in Vietnam in particular
and the continual build-up of
arms in general. We hope to get
governments to see peaceful alternatives to war.”

ferson to Best. At Jefferson and
Best, the Masten Street Armory
will be picketed. The Walk will
proceed to Best and Main, and
then to Main and North, where
an Army Recruiting Center will
be picketed. From there, walkers
will march down North to Porter
and on to the Peace Bridge. The
distance of the route is about 10
miles and will take from five to
six hours.

YQRXAT~BUFFALr

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, AUGUST 5. 1966

CNVA to Hold
Peace Walk
Tomorrow,
Hiroshima Day

Local walkers will meet at Norton Fountain on the UB campus
at 8 a.m. for a silent vigil in
memory of the 78,000 Japanese
killed by the atomic bomb blast
of August 6, 1945. At 9 a.m. the
Walk will proceed down Bailey
Avenue to Kensington, where the
Army Recruiting Station will be
picketed briefly. From there, the
route will follow Kensington to
Main, Main to Jefferson, and Jef-

H

OF NEW

■"

VOLUME 16

Walkers in the Buffalo area
will find themselves part of international demonstrations against
war and the armaments race.
Hundreds of thousands of people
are expected to protest in the
United States alone. August 6
has traditionally been a day of
war resistance. Thi» year it marks
another International Day of Protest against the war in Vietnam.

UNIVERSITY

STATE

\"ma

\

Additional Parking Facilities
To Claim More Trees, Lawn

Hall near the Old Faculty Club

building.

The lots have been described

by Mr. James Sarra, Supervisor
of Construction and Utilities, and
Mr. John Warren, Coordinator of
Planning and Development, as
“temporary.” The new lots will
have neither curbing or blacktop
covering. Mr. Warren explained

whereby the University buys the

materials and rents the equipment and men from the contrac-

tor.

The request

for funds from
was made
through the Office of Business
Affairs. The planning for the
parking lot sites was that of Planning and Development.
the State University

The questions remain: why was the Amherst site originally chosen and why is the decision not to become the sub-

ject of debate?
The most disquieting aspect of Gould’s statement is
the peremptory manner in which he attempts to cut off
(Coat'd on P. 4)

�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Friday, August 5, 1966

Urban Extension Center to Be Established
Five area colleges this year will
launch a project aiming at the
establishment of a “Cooperative
Urban Extension Center” to promote university-community dialogue on such local problems as
poverty, integration, transportation, government and planning.
The prime contractor of the
program is State University at
Buffalo's evening division, Millard Fillmore College, supported
by Canisius College, D’Youville
College, Erie County Technical
Institute and Rosary Hill College.
It is being financed by a $30,000
grant provided under Title I of
the Higher Education Act of
1965 which calls for community
service and urban extension.
The immediate concern of proleaders, according to Dr.
Robert F. Berner, Millard Fillmore College Dean and initiator
of the project, is organizing the
Cooperative Urban Extension Center. which will operate under an
executive board comprised of
University and governmental and
community agency representatives.
gram

Center headquarters will be
situated in downtown Buffalo,
one suggested location being the
Eagle Street building now occupied by the State University at
Buffalo’s Law School. The Law
School has offered a minimal
amount of space as preliminary
to an eventual takeover by the
Center upon the present occupant’s move to the University’s
Amherst campus.
At first serving

as

a university
community meeting ground for
defining and analyzing urban
problems, the Center will eventually be utilized as a base for
training community leaders, who
then in turn will train other po-

tential leaders.

Dr. Berner said the program
was organized at an ad hoc advisory committee meeting held
earlier this year and attended by
representatives of the participating colleges, as well as community leaders from the Mayor’s Of-

fice and Common Council, the
City Planning Committee, the
Community Welfare Council, the
Commission on Human Relations

NDEA Checks Arrive;
Aid Office Reorganizing
After two months, the first
checks from NDEA loans have
arrived in the Office of Financial
Aid.

When asked why the actual
took so long, Mrs.
Norma Haas, Executive Secretary to the Committee of Financial Aid to Students, explained the process to the Spectrum.
“We cannot make an award until
the student has registered.” Federal law requires a summer
school student to register for at
least six hours to be eligible for
the loan. It takes from two to
three weeks for Admissions and
Records to determine whether or
not a student has been properly
registered. Once approved, the
student is put on an agenda and
is eventually called in to sign
a promissory note and loyalty
oath. A voucher is then sent to
Albany where it takes from six
to eight weeks for the first check
to arrive. The University, in the
meantime, ma yprovide tuition
waiver and bookstore credit if
the student applicant has filed
on time. “We teel a moral obligation to see that they’re paid."
explained Mrs. Haas.
Both Mrs. Haas and Dr. An
payment

thony Lorenzetti, newly appoint-

Approximately 120 people from
the East Coast and from Puerto
Rico and the Virgin Islands are
expected to participate in the
program. Dr. Carl Minnich, Director of the Amherst High School
Adult School, is Project Director
and Dr. Nicholas Kish, Jr., Assistant Dean of the University’s Millard Fillmore College, is Adminis-

trative Director.

A $36,000 grant from the U.S.
Office of Education, administered
by the National University Extension Association, will provide
•utstanding consultants for the
institute.

The committee has drawn up
a list of specific problem areas
in the community which might
warrant an educational type of
program, but found the most distinct need to be “the bringing
together of community leaders
from government and community
agencies, along with college personnel, on a somewhat regular
basis to focus attention on community problems, to discuss problem areas with faculty resource
specialists, to identify areas for
needed fact-finding through research, to plan educational programs in order to gain certain
ends and to recommend solutions
to problems wherever feasible.”
This need has led to the incorporation into the first phase of
the program a series of dialogue
seminars on community problems.

The series will be initiated with
two conferences to be held this
year.

Said Dr. Berner, “The absence
of such a forum at present has
limited the attempts of individuals and of independent groups in
their attacks upon the problems
of the urban community.”

The first conference will be
entitled “The Impact of Social
Factors on the Expanding Niagara Frontier” and will deal with
the lack of coordination between

ed Director of Financial Aid and
Coordinator of the Economic Op-

check into the Admissions and
Records process to see if it might
be speeded up.

Dr. Lorenzetti explained that

many of the complaints that come
to his office are valid and that
the office is undergoing a reorganization to meet

increased demands for financial aid from students. “The growth of the financial aid office has been tremendous over the past few years. It
has become a strong and integral
part of the student’s life. We are
adding more services and hope
to provide belter service. Like
the rest of the University, we arc
suffering growing pains.”
Approximately 90% of the student body is dependent fully or

in part for financial aid either
from NY State scholarships or

Memorandum VI
Meeting of July 29, 1966

Present were seven members
and a temporary recording secretary provided by one of the
members.

The first item of business was
the summer budget. The cochairmen reported that they had
submitted a request for funds to
the Faculty-Student Association.
The Task Force decided to withdraw the application since the
Task Force is an all University
committee and the FSA derives
its monies from student assessments. The committee therefore
Headed'to expend minimal but
necessary funds for operating

expenses.

The Institute is entitled, “Adult
Basic Education Teacher Training
Institute." The purpose, Dr. Minnich said, is to prepare the teacher trainees who will be responsible for training the teachers
who will, in turn, then teach
undereducated adults.
The participants will spend 40
hours a week in the classroom,
on field trips, and in special evening meetings. Of the 32 New
York State participants 11 teachers have been selected from the
Buffalo area.

One of the objectives of this
first conference, as stated in the
prcposal submitted to the federal
government, is “to bring together
social scientists and physical planners and thus to encourage consideration of human as well as
architectural aspects in renewal

or housing projects.”

The conference will also promote participation of indigenous
leaders in the planning effort.

during the 1966-67 academic year.
It is proposed to recruit and select about 30 worker-leaders at

least 50% of whom will be indigenous to the low income, minority group areas, and the balance of whom will be volunteer
workers. The program is designed
to provide these non-professional
leaders with new skills and attitudes and thereby improve their
capacity to serve as supervisors

and/or program evaluators.
Professional staff from the participating schools will be assigned areas of specialized training

The second conference will be
projection of “The Niagara
A
Frontier in the Year 2000
Utopian View,” and will combine
ideas of community leaders and
university personnel in drawing
up a hypothetical blueprint of
a modern Niagara Frontier megolopolis of the next century. By

for which their present curriculum recommends them. Erie
County Technical Institute could
provide courses in law enforcement and fire administration
training, and Canisius, D’Youville
and Rosary Hill may provide
courses oriented toward the social
and behavioral sciences.

program leaders hope to be able
to isolate short-range objectives
for immediate action.

“All the institutions expressed
interest and concern about the
problems inherent in urban renewal and development, as well
as problems related to geriatrics,
housing and integration,” Dr.
Berner said.

a

—

looking at long range projections,

Leadership training activities
envisioned as the second phase
of the program, will consist of
courses offered by the staff of
the Cooperative Urban Extension
Center aimed at educating those
already active in social, civic and
governmental organizations in the
methods of training others who
are potential leaders.

One such Leadership Training
Program will be implemented

Of the Center’s program, the
submitted proposal stated, “These
functions do indeed require college level resources; and the colleges will indeed grow in stature
as their faculties become involved
in the solution of community
problems.”

with plans to resubmit its budget
to the next administration.
Discussion then turned to securing a permanent office for the
Task Force and hiring a part-time
secretary for the remainder of
the summer. The co-chairmen
agreed to investigate both mat
ters and to report to the committee at the next meeting.
Professor Sapp then reported
on the meeting of the Hearings
Committee held on July 26. At
that time the committee completed the announcement of the
hearings scheduled for August
10 and IX and discussed how the
hearings are to be conducted.
ings

was set

up according

to

which hearings will be held once
every two weeks with the day
alternating between Wednesday
and Thursday.
A member of the Organizational Analysis Committee then reported. Mr. Miller, Co-Chairman
of the committee, and Mr. Darrow had communicated with Dr.
Anderson both by. letter and by
an informal meeting with him.
Dr. Anderson made available to
the committee documents published to date by the Office of Institutional Research which are
pertinent to the Task Force mandate and agreed to attend the
August 5 meeting of the Task
Force to answer questions about
procedures.

Music Dept.

Concert

loans of various kinds.

Participants selected by their
State Directors of Adult Education will receive government stipends for board, room and travel

social and physical planning in
urban renewal projects.

TASK FORCE

portunity Program on campus,
plan to go to Albany on Monday
to find out why the new Albany
IBM system concerning student
loan applications has become so
lackadaisical. They also plan to

Adult Education Institute
To Train Teachers Here
A monthlong Institute designed to train instructors who will
be preparing teachers of adult
basic education classes will be
held at the State University at
Buffalo during August.

and the Commission on Human
Rights, and the Commissioner of
County Works.

The Music Department will
present a Program of Sextets for
Wind Quartet and Piano on Wednesday, Aug. 10, at Baird Recital
Hall from 1 to 2 p.m.
Performers in the program include: Robert Mols (flute), Ronald
Richards (oboe), James Pyne
(clarinet), Lowell Shaw (French
horn), Nelson Dayton (bassoon)
and Carlo Pinto (piano).
The program will include “Sex-

tet”

by Willem

Pijper. “Sara-

bande et Menuet (from the Suite.
Op. 24)” by Vincent DTndy, “Suite
for Winds and Continuo" by Samuel Scheldt (transcribed by Gerd
Ochs) and "Sextet (1932-1939)" by
Francis Poulenc.

Fields Reading
A concert and reading by Mr.
Edward Fields will take place in
the Dorothy Haas Lounge, Norton
Union, on August 10 at 8 p.m.
Mr. Fields, a New Yorker, had
a book published. Stand Up
Friand With Me, by Grove Press
in 1962 which won the Lament
Prize.

All Quiet on the Home-Front?

�Friday, August S, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

A Review: 'Top Hat' and 'Pavane for Minstrel'
(reviewed by J. A. LaRue)
Top Hat and Pavana for a Dead-

Pan Minstrel demonstrate the
considerable brilliance of Paul
both as author
C
and director. These one-act plays
were presented in Baird Hall last
weekend and will be repeated
this weekend.
One-act plays are, to my mind,
frequently disappointing;* they
are often too sketchy, too quaint,
while lacking substance. The
genre is, in fact, something akin
to a Chinese meal—tasty enough,

but it leaves you ravenous about
an hour later. Carter-Harrison
happily transcends the limitations
of this genre and gives us something lasting as well as immedi-

ately satisfying.
Top Hat, the first of the two
plays presented, represents something of an archetypal situation
along the lines of woman versus
man. Top Hat, to put it most
blatantly, relates the sexual Odyssey of a middle-aged woman with
the help of a tramp, who supplies
the potency for a husband too
busy earning money to be entertaining. The woman, played competently but not with sufficient
lasciviousness by Bryna Weiss,
finds the tramp in a public park
where she customarily goes to
enjoy the primates. She deliberately seduces the tramp and then
plays with him like a Cheerio
champion bringing her yo-yo expertly around the world. Sexual
imagery and connotations are
throughout; indeed, they form,
in some sense, the very substance
of the play. However, they are
not handled clumsily, as is frequently the case on the American
stage, but with a certain deft

grace which translates the work
into one long sensual dance.
Some members of the audience
did become a bit huffy at times
(perhaps when their own particular neuroses were rubbed the
wrong way). Be that as it may,
one can hardly become incensed
at the overt sexuality of the production when the woman’s defense of her hedonistic pursuit
of pleasure is presented so eloquently: “Why pervert the essential vibrations of one’s flesh?”
Why indeed? She admits that she
only practices temperance for future enjoyment (as do we all, I
suspect).

The tramp silently does his
is wont to have her little complaints while the wondrous journey is being made: “I hate to
complain, but are we getting
somewhere?” None the less, the
tramp perseveres time and again
and ably assists her to get over
the hump and reach the rich summit of her pleasure. But while
performing this (k)nightly task,
he naturally debilitates himself,
and we watch his tragic demise.
And what could be more tragic
than a coffee-grinding man on
his way out? The tramp brings
to mind Nelson Algren’s pathetic,
washed-out Dove Linkhorn. Joe

Sordetto did a masterful job in
the mime role of the tramp and
his mime song was beautifully
coordinated with the off-stage
sound. Rich LeCastre, as the
musician, overlooked a 11 these
goings-on and ably interpreted
the splendid musical score by
Bill Penn, who achieved a nearperfect synchronization of sound
with the text. The play betrayed
a certain Beckett-like emptiness
and even the silences gave the
impression of a carefully orchestrated syncopation, while effective mime helped to carry the
burden of the story line.
If Top Hat was a bit sensual for
the usual Baird Hall audience,
then Pavane for a Dead-Pan Minstrel was even more so. For this
play deals with the very manifest
hustling of a young lady by two
men, a white in black-face and
a black in white-face. For me this
play is by far the more disturbing of the two. A white and a
black play an elaborate game of
hide-and-seek with themselves
and with society. Carter-Harrison
makes much out of the ensuing
confusion and loss of identity.
Both at times forget their appropriate masks and begin to act in
a confused and contradictory
manner. But significantly enough
it is always the white-faced Mr.
Brown who condescendingly orders the black-faced Mr. Smith
to call the waiter. The immediacy
of the situation to contemporary
America could not be more apparent, and yet at the same time
a true universal meaning is to be
found, for those masks could be
anything: they are all the ploys
and hypocrisies which people
adopt to shield themselves from
the hostile world.
The point of this elaborate
game is to discover who, black
or white, will be able to make it
with the first available chick who
turns up. Thus we are down to
the nitty-gritty, the reason why
the white man is supposedly afraid of Black Power. Nevertheless
one wonders whether black-face
or white-face makes any difference, inasmuch as the two males
themselves agree (in a spoof of
the sexuality implied in so many
American commercials); “It’s
what’s up front that counts.”
The necessary female arrives
in the shape of pretty Polly (who
may or may not want a cracker),
played with an incredibly convincing naivete by Christina Hamage, whose honeyed Southern
accent adds yet another rub to
the script. It is not long before
Mr. Smith and Mr. Brown fall
over her like bushido cocks
wrangling over a hen. The instrument of seduction is to be
the dance, which is exquisitely
choreographed by Eleo Pomare
(the persuasiveness of the actorsas dancers attests to the thoroughness of Mr. Pomare’s intense
training). In keeping with their
masks, Mr. Smith (in black-face)
tries the rhythm and blues approach, whereas Mr. Brown (in

Research Writers Bureau
To Peddle Student Papers
New York—A unique service
fof evaluating and marketing college research papers, called the
Research Writers’ Bureau Ltd.,
was established in the metropolitan area recently in response to
widespread demand amongst publishers for articles on academic
subjects. The firm is reported to
be the first organization of its
kind to concentrate its efforts
entirely on selling campus-written material.
According to

Richard

Fennelly,

director of the literary agency,
there are thousands upon thousands of periodicals, ranging

from

the

smallest

journals to

some of the largest “slick” maga-

zines, which need well-researched
student manuscripts. He reports
that some of these pay up to 10
cents per word for this material.
"Academic journals are usually
the first and too often the last
place students consider as an
outlet for their work,” Fennelly
says. “This is lamentable because
there are numerous semi-popular
magazines which pay decent
money for research writing. They
cover a wide field of interest,
including science religion, history, medicine and business.”

Scene from Pavane for a Dead-Pan Minitrel

makes use of the classical “white man’s music.” In a
phantasmagoric seduction scene
Christina Ramage is thrown pitilessly back and forth between
the two dancing minstrels. Miss
Ramage deserves considerable applause for her ability to shift
fluidly from classical to rock and
vice-versa.
Frank Richardson, as Mr. Smith,
and Lakin Hill, as Mr. Brown,
both convey the appropriate
white-face)

moods of cynicism, sensuality,
and crassness. An indication of
their success is the frequency
with which the role-change between black and white becomes
confusing. Hayward Allen is also
good as the very personification
of a dumb Polack barkeep. Once
again the music of Bill Penn is
outstanding. As for the outcome,
I shall not be so unthinking as
to reveal the result of this brutal game.

These two one-act plays constitute one of the best theatrical
offerings of the year in Buffalo.
The author-director is in complete
technical control of his material
and actors: his use of language
is rich, highly salacious (to borrow from one of the author’s own
puns), and full of tantalizing ambiguities. Anyone who is interested in theater should see these
plays before this important talent
leaves campus..

Jazz Impressions
By RON NAPLES

The “in crowd” met again the
other night, but is wasn’t the
same. The new Ramsey Lewis
Trio made it’s first local appearance at Buffalo’s Melody Fair on
Sunday. July 24. The old trio,
featuring bassist El Dee Young
and drummer Red Holt, broke
up early in June. The new men
are Cleveland Eaton on Bass and
Maurice White on drums.
Thc_trio has done a good job
Sin keeping the" “new" Ramsey
Lewis sound considering they’ve
been playing together for only
a month. “The ’In Crowd’ ”, and
“Hang On Sloopy,” Lewis’ two
biggest commercial successes
sounded basically the same, perhaps because they featured only
Lewis on piano.

There was a marked absence in

the rhythm section on “Love
Theme From Spartacus.” “West
Side Story Medley,” and “The
Party’s Over.” as once again
only Lewis’ talent made up the
difference. In semi-fairness to the
new men. a group does not become cohesive in the amount of
time that they’ve been together,
but the old group had a sound
going for them that this group
will never come close to. The
old group played together for 14
years and the names Young and
Holt were automatically associat
ed with that of Lewis.
Virtually every

area of college

study has some representation

in

this type of periodical, according

to the linn’s director.
The new agency, which does
not return manuscripts unless
first queried with a description
of the paper, is located at 95-31
104 St., Ozone Park, New York.
WANTED

Female expert in trivia, local television station appearance, contact Henry Lawrence, 831-3405
or 834-0033.

In time. Eaton, a fine bassist
and White, a fast young drummer, will continue to give Lewis
solid support and not ruin his
new image. Lewis will not hurt
financially as a result of the
split (he will probably gain). But
he will never again reach the
artistic heights the old group
had reached. The new men lack
the versatility of the old, (Young
on cello, and Holt on tambourine
and wood-flute) and this naturally gives the group less freedom
of

expression.

But

then

again,

how much freedom do you need
on “Ain’t That Peculiar" and
"High-Heeled Sneakers.”
As an individual who has been
a Ramsey Lewis fan for many
years and one who hasn’t missed
a Buffalo performance of his
since 1960, Ineither like nor dislike the new commercial Ramsey
Lewis. I no longer look forward
to every new album or performance, but I will still buy his records and attend his shows simply
because the fine talent of Ramsey Lewis is still there.
As I stated a few weeks ago,
Ramsey obviously is looking for
a saleable item. He’s found it.
The results are more money, but
a loss of something possibly
greater than money. Ramsey replied very quietly when I stated
that I was very sorry to hear of
the break: “It’s just like a mar-

riage, when you break up your
friends always feel bad, but it's
one of those things,” he replied.
Jazz-singer Jon Hendricks echoed my sentiments by saying,
“It’s like seeing one of the foun-

dations of the earth crumble,
there probably will never be a
tighter group.” This is an indication of the respect jazz people
had for the group.
Ramsey Lewis plays for the
(people, this is obvious (and not
wrong) and he knows what type
to hear. The audience at Melody
was one that was 90% white
and predominantly young. Ramsey responded with a program of
popular favorites such as “They’ll
Never Be Another You,” “Satin
Doll,” "Shadow of Your Smile,”
"Wade In The Water,” “Song For
My Father," and "j Ain’t Got
Nobody." Only once did he attempt a "funky” blues theme on
"Salute to Ray Charles.” Missing
were such familiar blues pieces
as “C.C. Rider," “Lil Lira Jane,"
"Look-A-Here,” and "Somethin’
You Got.”
The crowd responded favorably, remained respectfully quiet
throughout most of the numbers,
and showed by their applause
that they thoroughly enjoyed the
114 hour performance. I applauded the still-evident genius and
talent of Ramsey Lewis and the

Fair

efforts of Eaton and White, but
it just wasn’t the same.

Grant to Establish
Pathology PhD Program
A $360,000 grant has been received by the State University at
Buffalo's Department of Pathology for the support of a training
program designed to lead to the
awarding of the Ph.D. degree in
experimental pathology.
The five-year grant from the

National Institute of the Division

of General Medical Sciences will
finance the training this year of
seven students who have received
bachelor's degrees and one medically qualified trainee, and three
bachelor’s degree students and
one post-doctoral trainee each
year thereafter.

�Friday, August S, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

'oCetter

to

the Editor

The Problem of Fines
TO THE EDITOR:

A few months ago I was charged with something around $200
in parking fines. In the process
of obtaining a petition form, I
came upon a secretary in the
office of the bursar engrossed in
typing out bills for parking tickets alone. I believe this was her

only job. A campus policeman
came in with a batch of at least
twenty tickets (this was only midday) and, I swear, he remarked
with a smile something &lt;of the
kind that business was good. It
was toward the end of the semester so the student court was no
longer in session. I was told by
the secretary that my petition to

have my fines waived would be
given to a summer parking com-

mittee to be reviewed. Did she
know who was on the committee?
Well, some members of the administration. Did she know or
could anyone in the office tell
me approximately how much
money was brought in each year
from parking tickets? No. Did she
know where the money went? No.
Could she find out from someone
else in the office? No. Did she
feel that her life expectancy was
in any way reduced by being in
that office; No.

al justifications, followed by an
offer to discuss the matter in
more detail. A few days ago I
received a form (over a month
later) with a check mark next to

the word “denied”. Next to it
the word “granted” was checked
followed by $20, indicating that
they were giving back $20. Well,
being a thoroughly indoctrinated
U.B. student, a few days time
was almost enough to dull my
pain and allow the poison of
apathy to take its course. (I may
still). It was with some effort
that I decided to follow up this
decision and find out just who
the hell made it. Well, I did.
Get this. It was not made by
a “parking committee”, that is,
unless one man can be called a
committee, which I’m sure our
administrators think. The decision was made by the chief of
security, Murray; just the unbiased rfeview board a U.B. student could hope for and expect.
I will thank him for initialing
the document. The end, however,
isn’t yet. I can appeal this to
somebody in the fall, no doubt
ad infinitum. Well, I would just
like to draw a few observations
from this tale of misery.
I have

Well, being in a relatively stable mood, I decided to direct my
frustration into the composition
of a petition that would stir the
consciences of the most callousbuttocked, university-oriented administrators. However, in its finished form my petition was not
the ass-kissing oratory a middleclass boy would be expected to
produce to get his old man's
money back from some real authorities. Nor was it venomous
and full of vindiction and vulgarities. It was instead an admission
of my crime against the school
administration and an honest explanation of it with fairly ration-

learned that at least

some administration policies and

decisions can be traced back to
individuals (or individual, I
should say). They are not drawn
from out of ether nor are they
just based on precedent. An administrator, I think, does have a
mind; he knows many rules but
not all of them; he knows numerous rules that are in contradiction to one another. There
just has to be a certain amount
of selectivity in his decision.
Precedent does not account for
parking fines because when U.B,
was founded there were no cars,
so someone changes a rule
through personal initiative. I’m

trying to show that this shit about
precedent is just that. In short,
someone makes a decision so it
would seem someone is responsible. But, of course, we know that
that’s not how our administration
operates. Oh, maybe they’ll admit
responsibility, but see how many
offices you go through trying to
get an admittedly lousy decision
changed. A student is responsible
for his actions and if he gets out
of line he’s very liable to get his
ass tacked. An administrator
makes a shitty decision but until
enough people are burned, which
may be never, no sanctions are
levied against him . . . because
you either don’t find him or he’s
supported by other administrators. Are you with it?

The administrators, who sup-

posedly have the student needs
in mind, end up telling the stu-

dent what his needs are instead
of serving the student. My crime’s
punishment can be justified by
showing that if enough students
disobeyed, parking would be nearly an impossible situation. Well,
it could just be that the campus
cops make parking seem mere
of a problem than it is. I would
like to know how much and
where the money collected from
fines goes and the salaries of all
the people involved who help impose the fines. No doubt the university isn’t dumb enough to
make this a losing proposition
of keeping the kids in line for
their own good. And you know
damn well that this student body
served so well by the administration doesn't see half of the money
collected in its behalf.

Handel Concerto Cycle
Continues This Sunday
The second and third concerts
in the Handel Concerto Grosso
Cycle of the Buffalo Symphonette
will be performed in the Mary
Seaton Room of Kleinhans Music
Hall on Sunday, Aug. 7, at 2:30.
The Symphonette will play, in
addition to Handel, music of the
contemporary American, Alan
Hovhaness, and compositions of
Gabriel F a u r e, John Stanley,
Tommaso Albinoni, and Maurice
Ravel.
The next concert in the series
will be in the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery on Sunday, Aug. 21, at
4:00 p.m. Fred Ressel will conduct, and principal instrumentalists of the Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra will appear as soloists.

Tickets for the August 7 concert are available at Denton, Cot-

tier and Daniels and at Norton
Hall (U.B.), price $2.50, and $1.00
for students. The August 21 concert at the Gallery is free, sponsored by the Art Gallery and
the recording fund of the American Federation of Musicians.
The Buffalo Symphonette, with
Fred Bessel as founder and conductor, is in its 19th season and
is looking forward to the time
when Western New York has its
own complete summer festival of
the arts. Its offerings of the
complete cycle of Handel Concert! Grossi is attracting much
attention as a demonstration of
our musical resources and the
popular support they command.

I’m tired of meeting the administrators on their own ground,
playing acording to their rules,
but I find I have little ground
of my own because they have
the power to control so much of
my existence.
I think the problem of fines
is most crucial because it is one
of the few areas in student life
where the administration can
daily impose its power without

challenge.
I would like to hear from other
students on the issue of fines,
possibly a potent lobby could be
formed.

Scene front Top Hat

Peter Teichner

'H

RECREATION
Mr. Joseph C. Paffie, Norton

Swiss Chalet
1551 NIAGARA FALIS BLVD. 643 MAIN STREET
(Next to

(Opp. Shea's Buffalo)
Twin Fair)
Open Daily 11a.m. to 4 a.m.

Specializing in Charcoal Broiled Chicken
Reasonably Priced
—CONVENIENT TAKE-OUT AND DELIVERY SERVICEPRIVATE BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE

IF 7-4300

TL 2-0008

Boulevard

Downtown

Hall Recreation Director, reminds
all students that the recreational
facilities are FREE on Thursday.
Aug. lit from 2:30-5:30 p.m.
The air-conditioned recreation
area has table tennis, billiards,
and bowling facilities.
All the bowling lanes have
been resurfaced and are in excellent condition. All the billiard
tables are reconditioned and it
is hoped that students will take
proper care of the area for their
own future enjoyment.

Main,

N. of Hertcl

Hamburgers
Chicken Dinner

•

«owARDjo«monJ

FRY
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119
I
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Brown French Fried Potatoes ■ Cole
Slaw«Tartare Sauce*Rolls and Butter

I

WE CAN FILL YOUR HOMETOWN PRESCRIPTIONS
COMPLETE LINE OF ALMAY COSMETICS

15£
-

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—

—

RUSTCRAFT GREETING CARDS
Prescription and Non-Prescription Drugs

Phone; 835-1663
835-3233
Please show your Student ID Card when making purchases

LEONARDO'S
FINE FOOD

&amp;

DRINK

—

GROTTO BAR
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

“

WEDNESDAY &amp; FRIDAY

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
ONE STOP SERVICE

Two Locations:

CENTER
Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait

Main Street Thruway
1205 Niagara Falls Blvd.
&amp;

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Drydeaning

ONE DAY SERVICE

University Plaza
TF 6-4041

�Friday, August 5, 1966

SPECTRUM

riLM
WHAT IS A CRITIC

.

By Marty

?

Since my last review appeared on “Page
teft,” I have been asked by many people
what qualifies one to be a movie reviewer.
I thought for a while and then decided on
this answer. Nothing! Well, O.K., you need
some experience in theater, drama, directing,
acting and English and a desire to write, but
other than that, anyone can be a reviewer
(and usually everyone is). The reviewer must
create a following and this is done if his
values in film or art are the same or closely
related to one’s own belief. One may then
use his beliefs as a yardstick id deciding
what films to see. The second “use” of a
reviewer is to be a “conversation piece on
paper.” By this I mean someone to compare
your own views of a film with and in this
mental discussion hope to obtain a better
knowledge of the film, one’s own values,
and to decide again if the critic’s ideas and
yours correspond. I prefer the second choice.
It’s more exciting and stimulating. The reason that I bring all this up is because I would
like to discuss a film that has already closed.
I cannot sell it anymore, but maybe you
would like to compare notes.
The film is by Mekas and was included
in the Circle Art Underground Film Festival.
“Hallelujah, the Hills,” was one of the ten
best films I have ever seen. On occasion I
come out of a cinema saying: “Oh, man, if
that were my film, I would never make another it’s too good to try to top!” I said
this when seeing “The Gospel According to
Saint Matthew” and not again for 3 months
until I saw H.T.H.
-

I disagree with the assistant manager of
the Circle Art who said that it was light and
funny. Two adjectives like that could only
partially cover this masterpiece. The film
tells the story of two young men who at one
time loved the same girl. Each saw her differently, and through a series of flashbacks
this is transmitted. However, this is only the
start of what Mekas is trying to say, as we
view a trip of the imagination of the two
young heroes. (I am sorry that names were
not available in advertising material). The
understanding of two people, especially two
males, who have the acquaintance of the
‘same’ girl is a gateway or pass to freedom
of mind, spirit, body, and the key to life.
In a relationship with women, as revealed
in the film, one is constantly putting on a
mask, and seeing life as a camera. One
watches oneself and says “if this is love this
is how I will act,” and in acting in this fashion one will enjoy life. This is the ultimate
middle-class idea of love, laughing and jumping in the hills, hallelujah! It’s great if it
could happen without the participants “thinking” it, to let go in an experience so completely that you are not aware of it until
it is over. Because of my own views and experiences, I find that this total involvement
can be achieved much more readily with a
person of the same sex. I think Mekas agrees.
In the film, when the gentlemen thought
of the girl, they imagined a situation with
themselves being totally free and the girl
following along. But as hard as she tried she
could never really join them because of the
demands placed on her by society and never
being able to let go (mentally and sexually)!
In the film, as is so often true in life, the
blame is placed on the parents, and the fact
that they would be disappointed if she fell
in love with a nut (and what real person
except for a night manager of Norton isn’t?)

H.T.H. traces the trip of the two boys
in their adventures with many toys, camping,
shooting, and women. We place in our mind
the ideal woman and how life would be after
one “knows” her, but it can never come true,

Sadoff

people, because all mates are, horrible as it
it to say, human type people.
We put women into a mental film, each
one having a different role, and the great
thing about them is that they are supplied
to us in such huge numbers as if from trees,
and the original sin is not with them but in
the scripts of our own films.

“Hallelujah, the Hills” may sound to
those who have not seen it like a bore. But
it was the most beautiful, wholly enjoyable
and fast paced film I have ever seen. The
photography of the film was excellent, winter was never so beautiful anywhere. The
cutting was original and exciting and employed many gimmicks, but unlike Godard
they were all necessary to the film. Boxes
within the frame single out the action without forcing the camera in for a typical close
up. The camera was completely mobile and
helped bring the audience into the, film.
All who know realize that my favorite

type of film is the silent flick, and my fav-

PAGE FIVE

'cjCetterA

to

Site Issue Not Closed
TO THE EDITOR:
“Oh dear what can the matter
be, someone is rocking the boat?"
So implied Dr. Samuel Gould in
attempting to end all debate on
the location of the future campus
for our illustrious university. One
can expect that a similar attitude
will prevai) regarding the style
of the new campus. The best we
can hope for on the rolling
plains of Amherst is Bureaucratic
Modern, such as Harpur College,
or a smattering of “neo-shoe box"
like Norton Union.
Yes, progress is the watch word
of the State University of New
York at Buffalo. Perhaps the Task
Farce (intentional) might make a
recommendation, in good taste of
course, and with respectful language. for permission to recommend respectfully the size of the
wash rooms at the new campus.
It would only be a polite request
and thus would not be tampering
with the managerial prerogatives
of Albany, President Furnas, or

Dr. Rowland.

Let we who wishfully

our

call
orite question is why can’t it be done today. selves members of the academic
can
It
and was by Mekas. The slapstick was community admit to our real
quick, original and was this way because status here in Buffalo. We are
it was on two levels. Physically it was really the janitors, custodians for those
like titles, of the factory
funny and could be separated from the film who
operated by Hayes Hall, in holdbut was important in creating a mood and ing for the bureaucrats in Albany.
contributing to the story line.

The acting was super—all this adds to
a super slice of celluloid. Little treasures to
those who know film. Example—boy comes
out of snow into cabin, says, “It’s not a fit
night out for man or beast” and, you guessed
it, W.C. Fields is hit with a bunch of snow.
There is a scene that resembles a rescue by
D.W. Griffith which maybe like three people
in the place recognized. So what does Mekas
do? He insults his unknowing audience by
showing them the actual piece of film that
he was imitating. The picture was in the
true tradition of Chaplin—everything they
expect on two levels—and something more.

the (Editor

The Task Force has been referred to as a farce because that
is exactly what it is. Neither the
local administration nor the raonarchs in Albany have shown any
inclination to take into consultation the students or faculty on
major decisions. Perhaps the reasons for this are more complicated
than we suspected last spring. On
the issue of the draft examina-

tion the local administrators simply demonstrated a desire to dictate to us the conditions under
which we were to receive our
“education”. This is a simple
enough, though immature, ideology of how a university should be-,
run. But the issue of the location
of the new campus appears to be
more ominous. The total lack of
open discussion on location, frohi
the beginning: the rapidity of
deciding where the campus would
be, one meeting of the Board of
Trustees: the apparent lack of
careful study: and the attempt
by Dr. Gould to crush discussion
now that it has begun, implies
sinister motives on the part of
some of those defending the Amherst site. Dr. Gould may well
be "clean", as indeed all indications lead one to believe, but it
would appear that other interests
in Albany and locally are not so.
Libel Laws prohibit the naming
of names in this game of Educational Monopoly without proof,
as they should. But this writer
has heard enough double talk
surrounding the new campus to
come to the conclusion that: Yes,
Susie, something is rotten in the
Buffalo area, and perhaps Albany
also. Surely open discussion on
possible sites at this time would
hurt none but those who have
financial interests in where the
new campus is to be located. It
will take study to explore the
real reasons behind the pressure
to cut off discussion, and study
there will be. But in the meantime, let all of us be careful
about how we receive statements
about Amherst. And to Dr. Gould,
with all due respect: to a number
of members of this academic community the issue of where the
new campus will be is not a
closed one.
Lawrence Faulkner

Aid Office “Callous”
TO THE EDITOR

I’ve had enough

.

.

.

Perhaps
to

have too if you have tried
After seeing five to ten films a week as you
get a student loan through the
this reviewer does, one sees so much so-so Office of Financial Aid. It seems
film that he can call something like “Born so simple on the surface but try
Free” a masterpiece. “Hallelujah, the Hills” and get that needed cash when
puts him back on track. “Born Free” I liked, you need it. We have a trained

sends along their neat little note
stating that if you don’t pay your
bill with the Bursar they won’t
credit you with your last semester's work. So you try to explain
to them why you can’t pay. Then
you get a letter frotn, the Bursar
stating they can’t pre-register you

staff of double-talking, frustrat-

because you haven’t paid. So
again you go around like some

This “Born Free” was equal to the best of Mrs. Haas. Students who NEED
Disney—n o t h i n g more except Panavision financial aid to stay in school
and super sound track. B.F. is the best film are discouraged at every turn. It
enough to file your request
I can recommend to see that is still showing, isn’t
months in advance.
You bare
so if you’re the kind that must see a film be- your soul on their blasted forms,
cause I like it, go see it.
present budgets that only a CPA

ing. Maybe they let you pre-register and maybe they forget. If they
forget, you end up not being able
to attend your classes because
they arc already filled. Appeal all
you want to the Office of Financial Aid; they are still shuffling

But the happiest moment comes when
someone agrees with you, and your views
are understood by the other party. After seeing H.T.H. I went to McDonald Hamburgers
downtown and was discussing this film, becoming upset because so few people have
seen it, and when it is shown it has to go
under the title of “Underground,” when a
student from a college in New England heard
my ideas about this unknown film and at once
identified it as “Hallelujah, the Hills” and
sat down and discussed it with me, I was
happy he saw it; I only wish you had! It was
cinema at its best.
P.S.—After revieweing the “Golden Age
of Comedy” for the 11th time I realized that
I could get the entire “History of the Movie”
series from the downtown library. Each episode runs about an hour, and I would gladly
show them at my expense if anyone cares to
see them. If so please contact me immediately
at TF 5-0082, or sign the list next week in
the lobby of the Conference Theatre.

could figure out . . . Then comes
a series of letters inviting you
to come in and sign the Oath—you no doubt have taken the Oath
every 3 to 4 months, but if you
are like me. you have to take off
from work and come in and sign
their form once again. Then in
a few weeks the idiots send you
a letter asking if you will accept
the loan. Again you make the
pilgrimage and sign another form
that you need the loan Why in
hell you would have applied and
gone thru all this crap if you
didn't want it, 1 have no idea
Of course they are oblivious to
the needs qr purposes of the loan.
They couldn’t care less where
you are going lo get the money
to buy the books you need for
the semester. Nor do they care
about food, rent or things like
that: they are just a bunch of
figures with no human meaning
to this bunch of callous females.
They tell you they will voucher”
for it—in a week or month or
some time. By this time you have
finished the semester and arc
starting all over again trying to
buy books, stall the landlord
about the rent, and the grocer
about food, but you have a new
problem. The office of records
’

your papers about.

If the Administration thinks
these facts are-exaggerated, let
them ask any student how his or
her Federal Defense Loan is coming. I think it is about time the
student body got together and
demanded a complete housecleaning in the Office of Financial Aid.
Let's get rid of these people. If
they can’t or won’t help the students, then they serve no useful
function. I think it should be
noted that these are loans, not
gifts, that these people are ad-

ministering, They must be paid

back and with interest. When we
students need the money is at
the start of the semester, not at
the end. We arc sick of the stupid
letters and double talk. We want
and demand our rights.

If the Administration w o n’t
step in, let's get help from the
State and Feredal people we elect

into office. If political pressure is

put on these politicians, we can
get rid of this bottleneck once
and for all. But we need everybody's support.
Robert

E. Kleasen 112662
137150

Landy M. Kleasen

�Friday, August 5, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

Editorial Comment

.

.

The Murder

.

from P. 1)
debate on the issue: “I hope that this statement will put
an end to any further speculation which can only do a disservice to the University, to the people of Amherst whc
have made us feel welcome and to the thousands of students from Western New York and all over the State who
need these educational facilities.” This sounds more like
a corporation executive than an educator. What is the purpose of cutting off debate on the issue? What is a university if it is not a place where inquiry and debate are protected and encouraged? And who is Gould trying to con
with his nonsense about “the people of Amherst who have
made us feel welcome.” The Amherst Town Board has
balked for two years because the location of the new campus in the town means the loss of taxable land. The Board
has also raised objections to rezoning for the interim campus
and has thus set back construction for at least a year. And
if Gould is so concerned about the needs of students for
educational facilities, why hasn’t he personally intervened
to get construction of the campus going before the spring
of 1968? An even larger question looms regarding Gould’s
concern for students: why haven’t the students been in on
the planning from the beginning?
(Cont'd

What is Gould attempting to do? There are a number of
possibilities:
1) The opposition to the Amherst campus has grown

considerably in the past few weeks. Just this week, Dr.
Raymond Ewell, Vice President for Research, called for a
reevaluation of the site issue. Another group comprised of
faculty, student, and civic leaders, has been quietly working
to have the campus located in the downtown waterfront
area. The movement could snowball. Gould may be attempting to feel out the opposition to ascertain how strong it is.
2) Gould could be attempting to hamstring Martin Myerson, the incoming president of this campus. Myerson, with
a background in urban planning, might be inclined to back
the downtown area over the Amherst site. Gould’s statement
would place Myerson in the difficult position of having to
oppose his administrative superior.
3) Gould may have cleared the statement with Myerson.
The whole issue would then become political.
President Gould’s ex cathedra statement may have seriously impaired the relationship between this campus and
the State University system. What could have been a rational
debate on an issue of immense importance to faculty and
students alike, has become grist for the political mill.
The students, and hopefully the faculty, will fight to
have the site issue reopened for debate. Too much remains
to be asked and answered to go anead with the Amherst
plans. If this University can continue to consider itself a
democratic institution, it can do no other than to insist that
this issue, which affect the lives of most of us, be reopened.
The Spectrum wishes to go on record in favor of a reevaluation of the location for the new campus and favors the
downtown waterfront site. Next week The Spectrum will
present a position paper to that effect.

THE

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By JOHN MEDWID

The stage is being set for the
destruction of North Viet-Nam.
Johnson and his advisors expect
that the destruction of Hanoi will
end the war. Moral questions aside, there is little reason to
believe that the bombing of
Hanoi will have any of the results that the Johnson planners
hope for. Bombing is not likely
to weaken the morale of the
populace any more than the German bombings were able to weaken the morale of the Londoners
who suffered them. In fact, the
bombings will solidify public
opinion and strengthen the morale of the North Viet-Namese.
As Ben Franklin cannily put it,
“We must all hang together or
surely we shall all hang separately.”

It will further restrict Ho Chi
Minh’s political movement. We
are giving Ho no choice but to
become a puppet of China, de-

JAMES CALLAN

pendent on China for military
supplies and foreign policy, thus
creating the situation we are
trying to prevent. Ho will be
more inclined to take a tough
line when negotiating when the

war gets to the conference table.

It will limit our own conduct
of the war. North Vietnamese escalation has always been a response to our escalation of the
war. If we bomb Hanoi we have
only threfe more rungs on the
destroying
escalation ladder
North Vietnamese industry which
can be accomplished without excessive loss of lives if the buildings are evacuated; bombing the
dikes on the Red River which
will flood North Viet-Nam and
cause widespread death, destruction and famine; and lastly start
a process of decimation of the
population until the war is
stopped. This policy is based on
the false assumption that Ho Chi
Minh controls the NLF and could
-

—

family.

The Republican wing of the
Liberal Party will present its
patron saint, Nelson Rockefeller.
(Not because anybody wants him
—but because he has effectively
kept primaries out of statewide
races.) The Democratic wing will
present Bobby Kennedy’s choice,
and who that will be remains
the only interesting unanswered
question. Interesting to me any-

way, because I will not under
any circumstances whatsoever
vote forw Rocky. (I may not vote

for his opponent either, but that
remains to be seen.)
What are the possibilities?
Well, we’ve got Eugene Nickerson, a bleeding-heart type liberal
from downstate, whose only credit is that he is probably naive
enough about big-time politics to
be quite innocuous in office. Then
there’s F.p.R. Jr., who is basing
his campaign on one big issue,
his initials. He’s been around
longer, has his men scattered
better, and is given a better
chance than any of his opponents (who said this isn’t a monarchy?) Thirdly, there’s Frank
O’Connor, who in his capacity as
President of the New York City
Council cannot really be expected
to turn the tide of downstate
favoritism. And finally there’s
Howard Samuels, who’s got about
as much of a chance as the Ath-

THE PEOPLE
One of the most current and
important topics on campuses
across the country is the issue
of academic freedom. Closely

tied in with this issue have been
the so-called Free Speech Move?
ments, the teach-ins, and our own
University Movement. It would
be pertinent therefore to have a
look at the state of academic
freedom on U.S. campuses and
to examine closely the Movement’s stated motives.
I am both proud of and amazed
at the amount of academic freedom on American campuses. At a
time when over a quarter of a
million American soldiers are
committed to a war, American
professors can state freely that
they support the other side, without fear of a midnight visit by
the KGB followed by a “peoples”
trial, much less lose their jobs.
The Genovese case in New Jersey
amply proves this.
It is amazing that at a time
when the United States is involved in a war which has grown
till its magnitude affects in one
way or another the destinies of
most of its citizens, these same
citizens who may be called upon
to fight, steadfastly protect the
rights of anti-war groups to hold
teach-ins, demonstrate, and freely
distribute their literature.
To resolutely protect the rights
of unpopular views to be heard
is admirable enough in peacetime, but in a time of conflict
it is indeed a feat Americans can
be proud of. It is indicative of
the high level of academic freedom and democracy that the
United Sattes has achieved and
should serve as a model for all

stop the war if he wanted to.
It would give Ho Chi Minh no
reason not to send his 400,000
man army south to confront
American and South Vietnamese
forces on the battlefield. This
would require an increase in
America’s commitment of men to
2.5 million soldiers. With 400,000
fresh North Vietnamese troops
ready to come into action it isn’t
likely that the end of the war
would be nearer.
The real reason for the bombing of Hanoi is not military but
political. Bombing Hanoi, it is
said, strengthens the morale of
Premier Ky, the current dictator
in Saigon, and weakens criticism
from the hawks here at home.
Johnson wants to wear two political masks: the friend of peace
and the man who is not afraid
to fight. Most important, however, he wants to be elected
again. It is unfortunate that people have to die so that Lyndon
Baines Johnson can be re-elected.
'

the right

.

On November 8 of this year we
will witness the Liberal Party
primary election. Only this is
not an ordinary primary
the
winner doesn’t have to face anybody, for New York liberals have
managed by various means to
keep all important offices in the

of Gonzago

By MARSHAL SCHATZ

freedom-loving nations. A view
with which I’m sure the Deans
of Peking and Nanking Univer-

sities and

writers Daniel

letics. For one thing, he’s from
Canandaigue (you know, about
half way between Beaver Point
and East Snowshoe). Secondly,
he’s a self-made millionaire, and
everybody knows that the only
rich men who get elected around
here inherit it. Also, he’s an industrialist—the cardinal sin to
the ruling Labor Barons.
But this is all very academic.
Like I said, Bobby’s blessing
would probably be enough to
put Barry Goldwater over, so
credits and debits are of interest
only in how they will affect the
man with the golden name.
Who will win? I’d say F.D.R.,
with an outside chance to O’Connor. In the Liberal Primary,
Rocky will get two votes, his and
Happy’s, and Robert Kennedy
will own two thirds of New York
State.

and

Sinyavsky will concur.
However at the same time that

academic freedoms and campus
democracy are being so vigorously enforced and respected,
enter from stage left, the so
called free-speeeh movements
and our own University Movement with democracy as its
stated goal.
free-speeeh movements
The
from their very conception were
never interested in free-speeeh.

Their leaders had all the free
speech they could use. However
finding out that their bankrupt
ideas were making no headway
they resorted to shows of force
designed to gain them the authority they could not win freely
or democratically.
The Movement at UB used the
issue of campus democracy as a
subterfuge for their leaders’ antiViet Nam views. Cowering under
the guise of conscientious objectors to what they feel is an undemocratic University, they pretended to be fighting for campus reform when in reality they
were attacking the war in Viet
Nam (our half of it anyway) and
the Selective Service System.
They presented their demands
to President Furnas coupled with
the threat that if they were not
met the Movement would tie up
the campus. Our own beloved
Spectrum even printed a front
page picture of them with the
.
. sit-in when
caption
their
demands are denied.”
Apparently the guiding lights

behind

the Movement moment-

arily forgot that the mark of
a genuine conscientious objector
in a democracy is to respect the

democratic process. He does not
where he has failed to
convince.
The Movements’ leaders claimed however that they did not
have to respect any campus rules
because their consciences told
them that they were fighting for
high moral reasons. It is commendable to recognize that morality and law are not always the
same and that when they come
into conflict that morality must
take precedence, however the
Movements’ leaders failed to recognize the centrality of intelligence to morality. They neglected
the fact that conscience by itself is not the criterion of morality, this is the work of reason.
It is apparent therefore that
the Movement was not interested
in campus democracy nor a student voice in the Administration,
but was merely using them as
slogans to mask their attack on
the Selective Service System and
the United States involvement in
Viet Nam.
coerce

There are even unconfirmed
reports reaching me almost daily
that Emmanuel Goldstein is the

real director of the Movement.
It may prove fruitful then some-

time in the future to examine
more closely the Movement’s leaders and the groups they represent. This may be done if the
Spectrum proves itself a true
believer in the cause it righteously claims to champion, campus democracy.

�Friday, August S, 1966

Foreign Policy Council’s
Vietnam Survey Results
To implement the Buffalo
Council for Citizen Responsibility
on Foreign Policy’s decision to
make a study of voter attitudes,
groups of canvassers have recently gone from door to door in
the 39th Congressional District,
ascertaining opinion on the Vietnam War (see below) and distributing some literature. Twentyfive members have participated
on four evenings during June,
with an average of twelve canvassers in the field at any one time.
The areas so far covered include
two essentially working-class and
two middle to upper middle class
districts in Cheektowaga and Amherst. Most people contacted (at
least 3 out of 4) agree to complete the questionnaire. The results have been surprisingly consistent from district to district
and from week to week. 258 com
pleted surveys are on hand, showing the following distribution of
opinion:
Would you vote for candidates
who are for these policies?

the “reform” and “peace” candidates in the New York primary
elections is also an indication of
an increasing opposition to the
war. In the 17th Congressional
District, Jerome Wilson defeated
official candidate and war sup
porter Peter Berle for the nomination. Rep. Multer only narrowly escaped defeat by peace candidate Mel Dubin (13th C.D.) and
the renomination, by less than
200 votes out of 35,000 cast, of
Rep. Farbstein is being challenged by Theodore Weiss (19th C.D.).
By and large, the New York results indicate an even stronger
sentiment for peace than the
previous results in California
(45% for Scheer in the 7th C.D.
in Oakland and Berkeley, and
over 40% for Hannon in the 20th
C.D. in Los Angeles).
Unfortunately, there are no
candidates at the present time in
the 39th, 40th, and 41st Congressional Districts who explicitly

Yes

Stop bombing North Vietnam? .
Immediate cease fire in Vietnam?
Immediate negotiations?
Negotiate with the National
Liberation Front (VietCong)?
Free elections including
all parties?
Withdrawal of all foreign troops?
(Bring Our Boys Home)

Many of those who voted ‘no’
on questions 1, 2, and 6 also
voted ‘yes’ on questions 3, 4, and
5. Personal canvassing experience
suggest that many of these people
think that bombing and other
strategic warfare devices would
‘bring our boys home’ sooner.
That 40% do answer ‘yes’ to
question 6 also indicates this to

be part of the “grass roots” feeling.

The strong vote for immediate

negotiations (question 3) almost
certainly represents a desire to
de-escalate, and the 62% vote to
include the Viet Cong is a direct
repudiation of the Administration’s position on this point. The
74% vote for elections with Communist participation may also be
contrasted with Ky’s insistence
on excluding both Communists

and neutralists from such elections.
These provisional results resemble in many ways the responses to National Surveys, and suggest that, despite possible individual biases, the methods used
by the Council are rather reliable. The most recent opinion poll
(published in the Buffalo Evening
News) indicated slightly less than
50% in favor of continuing the
war, and some 38% for withdrawal. The strong showing made by

Total
Opinion Ans’rs

No

No

30%

51%

19%

34

48

18
10

81

241

.40

50

10

239

53%%

31%%

15%

favor peace in Vietnam. Nevertheless, when the candidate of
the Conservative and Republican
Parties for the 39th C.D., John
Pillion, is moved to remark upon
“an underlying uncertainty concerning the bogdown of both our
peace and war efforts in Vietnam” (Buffalo Evening News,
6/29/66), it shows that the war
will be an election issue. Congressman Richard McCarthy was
the only representative from upstate New York to sign the letter to President Johnson in December, 1965, advocating de-escalation and a prdlonged bombing pause. He has recently supported more liberal policy
towards mainland China. We hope
to use the present canvass and
survey to strengthen the candidates’ judgment concerning the
desire for peace in their constituency, to influence one or both to
take a more outspokenly critical
attitude to the war, and, whatever the final position they may
take, to inject the Vietnam War
as a living issue into the coming
campaign.

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break the story which they belatedly realized was classified
confidential material. The Spectrum contacted Mr. Morris Kreppel of the Post Office Department's New York Regional Office, who contacted Mr. Kroloff's
Washington office.

Mr. Kroloff asked the Spectrum
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The story is classified confidential, he explained, “for reasons
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If you
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�PAGE EIGHT

Friday, August 5, 1M6

SPECTRUM

Fourth in a Series

Anarchism and The Student Movement'
By JOSEPH CHARLES BURGESS

Few of us would question the
assertion that there are large
numbers of students in institutions of higher learning throughout the country who are dissatisfied with the present university
system. Many of us have witnessed various attempts on the
part of student groups to bring
about changes in the way universities are operated. While
there can be little doubt that
there are a number of “student
movements” afoot, it could be a
mistake to say that these “movements” are part of an organized
general movement whose purpose is to give to students the
power to run the university. On
some campuses students have organized to bring about radical
changes in university administrative procedures. And they have
organized with the idea of changing the whole concept of the university and its place in the sociopolitical world. This is but one
dimension of what has been
called the “student movement.”
There are other dimensions. On
some campuses students are concerned only with more specific
problems. At one school students
want the right to sell beer; on
others they are agitating for extension of dormitory curfews. Almost all schools of any size have
groups actively engaged in civil
rights work, in anto-war and antidraft programs, or in aiding the
anti-poverty program.
On still
other campuses students are almost wholly concerned with obtaining freedom of speech. All
these things have been labeled
as part of a general student
movement by the press, by University administrators, and by
the public at large. Yet, as I
have said, it is not clear that
there is any general student
movement as such.
To assume that there is at this
time a national movement, the
goal of which is the total destruction of the university system
as we know it, is to be quite
naive. Each university campus
has its own specific problems;
each activist group its own specific goals. These specific goals and
the solutions to these specific

impossible, for we are being
hampered by the present university system.
To call for the complete eradication of the present university
system is certainly to adopt an
anarchist position. Perhaps, even
in calling for such basic changes
in the present system as would
make the resultant unrecognizably dissimilar to the present
system, we are anarchists. It is
important to note that the socalled student movement has
been labelled by certain astute

members of the press and present university administrators as
anarchistic. These people have

ther the cause of the student

movement.
I suggested above that the word
“anarchist” was ambiguous. This

becomes evident when one considers two of the most common
ways in which the anarchists are
characterized. Often an anarchist
is viewed as a “wild-eyed, bushyhaired, bomb-thrower.” On the
other hand, he is sometimes seen
as a non-activist. Although both
of these views are misconceptions
there is some historical basis for
them. Many of the European philosophic anarchists, people such
as Bakunin and Schmidt, argued
for a violent overthrow of the

*

What has been noted above is
that while the general anarchist
position is one which sees the
present socio-political system as
undesirable, the means by which
it is to be eradicated are various.
Those who held to a non-activist
position, I think, were mistaken,
since it implies a hard-core determination which ignores all
value of human action. In fact,
we do seem to be able to change
things, even if it is difficult at
times to do so. We do see that
our words and actions affect the
behavior of others, especially
when we organize with those
whose beliefs are similar to ours.
But here the anarchist cautions
us to beware that our own organization, however desirable it may
be in overthrowing the established order, does not become
itself coercive. In place of a
socio-political system the anarchist proposes that we establish voluntary associations, the members
of which are free to come and go
as they choose. Such associations
could take definite courses of action, but no one would be forced
to follow. All this, of course, implies that man is essentially both
good and rational, and that he
can decide on the basis of experience and insight what is best,
not necessarily prudent, to do.
Further, it implies that one can
convince others of the rightness
of his position through rational
discourse. These latter implications are of particular importance to the student movement,
for the university has traditionally considered itself, if it has
not actually been, an intellectual
community composed of those
who believed in the positive value of rational discourse.

If this is the general anarchist
position, what then does the an-

archist have to say to those who

"Often the anarchist is viewed as a 'wild-eyed, bushy-haired,
thrower/

are advocating changing the
structure of the university?

'

First, I think, he asks of these
people, and asks again and again:
“Where are you going?” and
had the ability to see what the
then present political system. “What do you want?” As does
students themselves have failed
And there was a good deal of the generally dissatisfied student,
to see. That is, that the satisfacviolence associated with the an- he finds the present university
tory fulfillment of present specifarchist revolts connected with system repressive. There is a
ic demands requires some basic
lack of freedom to. explore, disthe labor movement in the Unitchanges in the university power ed States. There
also those cuss, experiment, and implement
were
problems are not necessarily restructure. Anarchism is perhaps who took positions like that of new, and at times unpopular,
lated to some more general goal. the most unpopular socio-politiThoreau, who at one point held ideas. It is not enough, he sugThis is not to say that in finding cal position that one can take togests, to be given the privilege
that although one should do nothday. Most students, however, find
the solutions for such problems
ing to aid in the furtherance of to talk about ideas; we must
as have been mentioned we ought the role of social revolutionary
the present political system, one have a chance to try them out.
not to be guided by some genquite acceptable and desirable.
should not take part in a fight
eral principles or goals, for this
Yet, what more than a social revagainst it. Thoreau’s view is peHe also suggests that since the
is a position for which I want to olution in the university is the culiar to western
university ought to be a volunargue. The point is that presentanarchist looking for? Nothing, which distinguished anarchism, tary association of individuals,
itself from
ly there are many relatively iso1 would submit. That many stuEastern European anarchism by each of which is seeking to furlated groups making specific dedents, who are today calling for a belief in the needlessness of ther knowledge dissassociated
a revolution on the campus, do
mands and those who have authrevolution for the bringing about from his own personal interest,
ority in the present university
not wish to be labelled anarchof a free society. One of the apthat those who do not wish to
power structure realize this. They
ists is, I think, due to the ambigparticipate in the furtherance of
parent inconsistencies concerncan make concessions, they can
uity of the term itself. An ambiging the anarchist position is that knowledge allow those who do
grant our specific demands, and
uity which has led to an apparent
there have been both active and to proceed without external rewe will be satisfied, at least for
inconsistency in the anarchist popression. Underlying this is a
non active anarchists. Another ina time. By granting our specific
sition. While it may be insignificonsistency is that concerning col- view which assumes that men
demands, those in authority are cant that today’s student revolulectivism and individualism. Many trust and respect each other and
able to hold onto that authority. tionaries do not wish to be called of the European
anarchists held that such trust and respect is
They retain their image as a
anarchists, it has extremely unsocial and political views similar necessary for the mutual exporacondescending father, and their
fortunate results, for there is a to Marxism.
Specifically, they tion and sharng of ideas. The
authority goes unchallenged. tendency to ignore what the anwere fighting and arguing against failure of the present university
“Let the students demand what
archist has to say about the presa societal class structure which system, he finds, is not that it
they will,” they say, "decisions
ent university system and what
exploited the common man for has elements of distrust and disstill come from above and are ought to be done about it. The the benefit of a few.
The only respect in it, but that its highly
handed down to them by us. We anarchist, it seems to me, has way to get rid of
restrictive, and often petty, rules
such a socioremain as their guides and dimuch to say that is important political system was, they create and further distrust and
rectors
What is sad is that for holding the student movethought, to organize a revolution, disrespect. Such rules are often
many students accept this. The
ment together. He can offer some be it violent or not, against the established and enforced by those
students themselves have failed general principles upon which prevailing system.
who have no direct or indirect
The individto realize that many of their deto build a meaningful program ualist anarchists,
interest in the business of the
while recognizmands, and the frustrations infor the changing of the university ing the exploitation of the
university, which is to further
comvolved in having their demands system. There are three things mon man, saw
knowledge. The present system,
no value in oragreed to, have arisen as a rethat I will devote the rest of this ganized revolution,
rather they he feels, relies upon the distrust
sult of the university system itarticle. First, the general posisaw fit to remove themselves and disrespect which it creates,
self. Unless there are some basic tion of anarchism must be
made from the then present system and for its very existence.
changes in the present system,
clear, so that it can be shown encouraged other to do so. More
'he nature of specific demands that there are no inherent inimportant than these differences
The a n a r c h i s t’s question,
and problems cannot be seen ternal inconsistencies in the poamong the anarchists are their "Where are you going?” becomes
clearly. Neither can the demands
sition. Second, I want to discuss
similiarities. All of them saw the especially significant when parbe easily met, nor can solutions what the anarchist has
to say present socio-political system as ticular courses of action are proto specific problems be' arrived
that is important for the student an unnecessarily evil, repressive, posed by
those advocating basic
at with any facility. We have a
movement. Third, I wish to sugcoercive force which destroyed changes in the present system.
right as students, indeed as hugest some specific modes of acthe individual. In the extreme “What are you going to replace
man beings, to see our demands
tion which are in accord with the position some found that any it with?” he asks. The
caution
and problems for what they are
general anarchist position and
socio-political system was an unhere is that in many cases revoAnd it is my claim that this is which will at the same time fur- necessary
evil.
lutions solve only the immediate
”

"

problems, but not long term problems. Old repressive power structures are replaced with new ones
which are just as repressive, if
not more so, for purges often

follow revolutions. And purges
bring about new revolutions. So
the revolutionary process seems
endless. The goal must be, according to the anarchist, a university in which the free exploration of ideas is most significant,
and this sinever possible if one
only replaces one restrictive repressive power structure with
another.
The importance of the anarchist’s argument that the university
be a voluntary association for
the exploration of new and old
ideas is that it rests on the
grounds that we have, not only
as scholars, but as human beings,
something to share; that we have
common experiences. Without
shared experiences there could
be no voluntary association; there
could be no association apart
from one which was coerced. This
concept has important implications, for it implies that we draw
no boundaries, neither administrative nor conceptual, in our investigations. It implies that we
not close our minds, that we
continue to search and look for
new ideas to replace old and
that we re-evaluate old ideas in
light of new evidence. What is
suggested is that to gain knowledge is more htan to classify bits
of information. It suggests that
our classification system may be
faulty and in need of revision or
replacement, or perhaps in need
of expansion. What must be done
will become apparent in the light
of rational discourse. Yet, what
must be done now, need not always be what must be done. Indeed, this cannot be the case if
we realize that our conceptual
boundaries are but guidelines at
best.

Finally, let me suggest some
modes of action that the anarchist might think useful in eliminating the present repressive university power structure and in
replacing it with a free university as described above. Above
all, I think, that the anarchist
would insist that whatever action
be taken, it be taken collectively.
To individually withdraw from
the present university system
would allow the possibility of
each of us setting up our own
conceptual boundaries such that
there would be no furtherance of
knowledge, only stagnation. To
individually “use” the present
system would be to exploit each
other, and would only further
coerce others to follow in the
same path. In this case, individual gain becomes more important than the furtherance of
knowledge in its broadest sense
which involves a sharing of
ideas. It is only through a sharing of ideas and experiences
through rational discourse that
we can prevent the drawing of
dogmatic conceptual boundaries.

What then can we do? If we
believe in the concept of a free
university

we can organize our-

selves and refuse to recognize
the power of those whose posi
tions depend upon the inherent
distrust and disrespect to be
found in the present system. In
short, we can refuse the right
of the university administration

to act as our representative in
thq larger socio-political system
We can refuse appointments and
recognitions which are so generously handed down to us by those
who have no interest in furthering knowledge. We can refuse to

work for them, and instead work
for the furtherance of knowledge.
In short, we can use any means
necessary, as long as those means
do not subvert our goal of a free

university.

'

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                    <text>CIIMMFD
summEK

__

A

,&lt;r

»-■»-

"“--‘

M

X,

~~K

VORTRX
SUTRA

WICHITA

(See Pages

VOLUME 16

NO.

BUFFALO. NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 39, 1966

54

The Amherst Story: Facts, Figures
By PAUL SCIABARRASI
and MICHAEL D'AMICO

Over the past few weeks there
has been revitalized interest in
the Buffalo waterfront area as
an alternative site for the new
campus of SUNYAB now scheduled to be built in Amherst.
Feasibility of the waterfront
area is a question that will undoubtedly require a great deal ol
study. However, dealings concerning the Amherst site, the recommendation, the approval, the
purchase and the progress to
date are history. Parts of that
history, from time to time, have
been released to the public. Most
recent releases have begun to fill
in the picture, and although it
is not yet complete, the great
majority of the Amherst story is
now known. Only a careful study
of the University’s actions from
the very beginning can provide a
full understanding of where matters and motives are today.

Amherst Chosen
Sometime prior to January,
1964, it was decided, most probably by the UB Council or the
State University Board of Trustees, that a study should be made
as to the advantages and disadvantages of five possible locations for the building of a new
campus for the State University
at Buffalo. The five sites
to be studied included (1) Grand
Island, (2) Amherst, (3) Elma,
(4) Cheektowaga, and (5) Downtown Buffalo. The study, of considerable length and detail, was
compiled between January and
April of 1964 by Mr. Vincent J.
Moore, who was a former Buffalo
city planning aide (1956-1959) and
presently is a planning consultant for the State Budget Division in Albany. The report, which
considered various facets of each
of the five sites, was approximately 60 pages in length, including maps and aerial photos, and
was submitted, without recommendation, to the State University
Construction Fund. All the SUCF
did was reproduce Moore’s document and forward it, again without recommendation, to J. Lawrence Murray, then Acting President of the State University. Murray, in town, submitted the Moore
report with a “central staff’ rec-

ommendation for the Amherst
site to the Board of Trustees at
their June 11, 1964 meeting. This
meeting was the one time the
Trustees dealt with the site issue. Minutes of the meeting reveal that the Board, acting, on a
motion by then Trustee Edwin F.
Jaeckle of Buffalo, voted unani
mously to accept the report and
acquire the land in Amherst. The
SUNY then announced that they
would build the greater part of
the new University in Amherst.
There was no public discussion,
open investigation or dissent.
The Nature of the Area
The land purchased is an 800
acre site bordered by Sweet Home

Road, Millersport Highway, and
Ellicott Creek. Parts of the proposed site are as much as six
miles from the present campus
although the distance from the
main street entrance of the existing campus to the tract at Millersport and Maple is 3.5 miles.
Across Millersport Highway, adjacent to the Amherst site, are
an additional 350 acres previously
owned by the University. This
land, obtained from the Town of
Amherst by swapping the University-owned Audubon Golf
Course, will be used as an athletic field.
A close examination of the area
reveals the following: on the
northern border of the campus is
Ellicott Creek. The Creek is polluted by the Towns of Amherst
and Alden sewage plants, and at
times becomes stagnant. During
heavy rains, the creek overflows
its banks from 100 to 700 feet in
either direction. The Amherst

sewage treatment plant, just to

the south of the proposed site,

causes occasional objectionable
odors.

The land is level, marred by
several forest areas and the Niagara Mohawk Power line. At
present, storm water runs off the
land by natural courses and may
overflow from open ditches during heavy rains.
Topsoil east of Millersport is
not suitable for stripping and
abolit 1100 acres of topsoil will
have to be imported. Soft clay is
characteristic of this area and
could create various problems
for construction.

The area offers reasonably good
accessability by private transportation
ten miles via streets and
15 miles via expressway from
downtown. Distance to the airport
is 8 miles and to the rail terminal
is 9 miles.
—

No commercial
within convenient
tance so Buffalo
miles away) would

facilities are
walking disfacilities (10
have to be re-

lied upon. Employment opportun
ities are approximately the same
as the Main Street campus but
there is little local housing available.

Progress to Date
The University has spent just

short of four million dollars for
the acquisition and programming
of the site. Originally, construction costs (excluding planning
and acquisition) were fixed at
two hundred and fifty million
dollars. Revised figures indicate
a cost possibly exceeding four
hundred million dollars.
There were to be three phases
of construction each being completed in two year intervals beginning in 1968. Completion of
phase one has been moved up to
1970, indicating the other two
phases will also be two years
behind the original schedule.

Construction was to have begun
this fall but was delayed supposedly because of sub-surface soil
testing which has been going on
for two years, according to Mr.
Doemland, Director of the University’s office of Planning and
Development. Information obtained from a reliable architectural
firm has pointed out that subsoil testing and analysis for a
tract of land 1100 acres large
should take from three to six
months allowing enough time for
overcoming any possible problems. This can be broken down
to the drilling of six holes per
building per day. Two years is
ible for testing
believed unn
and analysis.
In the spring, Mr Martin Mey
Dean of The School of
Environmental Design at the University of California at Berkeley,
was appointed the new president

erson.

of the S.U.N.Y. at Buffalo effective September 1, 1966, It is believed that Mr. Meyerson, one of
the outstanding professional city
planners in the country, raised
some questions about the University’s proposed expansion. This
may be the reason why no master
planning or construction planning has begun. State highway
officials have substantiated this
lag in planning by stopping all
work on the Lockport Expressway and the expanded Millcrsporl
Highway which involves the Am-

herst campus area. Once Meyerson
assumes the presidency, planning
may gel under way.

Need for Interim Campus
The delay has caused a need
for building an interim campus
on Niagara Falls Blvd. The building to be constructed by the
Maret Corporation of Pittsburgh will be just south of the
Youngmann Memorial Highway,
approximately one mile from the
proposed Amherst campus. Amherst Town Board has granted a
clearance for the development of
up to 375,000 square feet of office, classroom and laboratory
space. This approval came after
the University signed a five year
lease with the Maret Corporation. The ruling overturned an
earlier recommendation of the
Amherst Planning Board to deny
a building permit for the facility.
Why Amhant?

Since the Board of Trustees,
in one meeting, voted unanimously to accept the Amherst site,
they must have weighed heavily
the recommendation for Amherst
made by Mr. Murray and of the
"central staff”. A close contender
for the new site appears to have
been the Buffalo location. One
possible reason for the rejection
of the Buffalo site might have
been a political struggle which
existed between then Mayor Chester Kowal and the State Senator
from the Amherst district, Walter
J. Mahoney, who, as Senate Majority Leader, was considered the
second most powerful man in
New York State. In 1964, corn-

munication between Governor
Rockefeller’s office and that of
the Mayor was at a low ebb.
Mahoney and Kowal communicated even less.

Mr. Walter J. Mahoney is now a
partner in a law firm with connections with the Maret Corporation.
In addition to signing the lease
for construction on the interim
campus, the Pittsburgh firm has
also been retained for construction on the Amherst site.
Irrevocable or Not Irrevocable?
J. Lawrence Murray, Executive
Vice-President of the State University, has made it clear that

development of the Amherst

cam-

pus has advanced too far for a
shift in location. "In my opinion,
Ihe decision to locale in Amherst
is irrevocable,” Mr. Murray said.
Dr. William J. O'Connor, in a

speech before the Kensington Kiwanis Club on July 25, 1966, expressed an opinion that building
in Amherst is a necessity because
of the area available. He has said
that "When one visualizes the
scope of this project it is more
readily understandable why the
200-acre site on Ihe waterfront
and an equivalent site at Grover
Cleveland Park arc totally inadequate.”

State Assemblyman Albert J.
Hausbcck after an interview with
slate officials drew the conclusion
that they arc unable to give any
reason why the waterfront site
cannot be used. Albany authorities state that final commitments
on the Amherst site have not
been made. It is not too late to
consider the waterfront area. As
far as size is concerned, although
Dr. O’Connor has mentioned a
200-acre site on the waterfront,
the Moore report envisioned 460
acres of possible available land
and an additional 260 acres which
can be reclaimed from the Lake
Erie Basin. This is undoubtedly
sufficient for building an extremely large University, as has
been amply proven by the Universities of Minnesota, Illinois,
and Ohio State.

Task Force to Begin
Open Hearings Aug. 10;
Urges Participation
The initial hearings of the Task
Force will take place in Baird
Hall on August 10, beginning at
7:15, and August 11, beginning
at 4:00 p.m. The hearings are
open. The university public is
invited to attend all hearings,
and all interested parties, groups
or individuals, are invited to present their views and recommendations, the only limitation on the
testimony being that these be
relevant to the mandate of the
Task Force. The mandate reads:
“I.) to inquire into and make
proposals with respect to establishing an open and continual
dialogue among such groups (students, faculty and administration); 2.) to make such proposals
as (the committee) deem(s) appropriate regarding organizational
means for participation by these

on display on second floor of Norton Union.
Two examples from Childron'. Art Program Exhibit
H„ ago 9.
right:
by
a
bird
Sharon
age
7;
by
Cathy
S.,
Loft: a grasshopper

groups in the formulation of edupolicy in the University."
The subcommittee on hearings

cational

requests that prospective speakers contact Mrs. Krause at 111
Baird Hall, 831-3411 by August
5. The subcommittee is anxious
that equal opportunity be available for all representatives. In
order that all shades of opinion
be heard, the subcommittee suggests that oral presentations be
limited to 15 miputes. Those who
wish to supplement their oral
presentation with a written statement, or those who would prefer
a written statement in lieu of
an oral presentation are invited
to transmit it to the subcommittee chairman (Allen Sapp). Such
material could be marked confidential—to be used within the
committee exclusively
or for
presentation at a public session
In order that the subcommittee
may have a permanent record to
underlay the final recommends
lions, the entire proceedings will
be recorded and transcribed.
—

�PACE TWO

SPICTRUM

Friday, July 29, 1966

Seminar Study of Children's Classics
Will Culminate in European Tour
On July 25, after three weeks
of intensive classroom study of
children’s classics, Mr. Robert
Dalke and his seminar in children’s literature left on a twentytwo day tour of the European
settings which inspired such famous authors as Han Christian
Anderson. Johanna Spyri, A. A.
Milne and the Brothers Grimm.
“We’re going to attempt to
relive these famous children's
fantasies,” said Mr. Dalke, elementary curriculum coordinator
of the Orchard Park Schools.
During the seven country tour
which will take them to the
homes, birthplaces and locales
which produced the writers and
their classics, the students will
be lodged at European hotels or
country inns in the fairytale settings which for so long have fascinated the young.
The culinary agenda is designed to recreate traditional
folk environments. England's kidney pie and yorkshire pudding
is only one of the many representative menus which the travelling scholars will sample. At the
very cottage in Maienfeld, Switzerland. where Heidi had her
first meal with the grandfather,
they will have a dinner consisting of round loaves of dark
Experiment in Infl Living
Students of France, who are
visiting the University this month
on the “Experiment in International Living” project, will bold
an illustrated discussion about
France on Monday, Aug. 1, at
7:15 in the Millard Fillmore
Room.
—

—

bread, cheese melted over the
fire and goat’s milk.
As exciting as the trip may be,
it has been preceded by arduous
research and study of not only
the authors and their works, but
also of the history, climate, geography, and culture of their
homelands.
“They’re staying up until all
hours of the night studying,”
Mr. Dalke said. “I have never
taught a finer or more enthusiastic group of people.”
The objects of the professor's
praise were chosen from a field
of over 70 applicants after careful screening by Mr. Dalke. They
are all graduate students, and
most are elementary school
teachers.
To enable a more penetrating
glimpse into each country and its
authors, the students have been
divided into five groups, each
of which has been assigned a
specific area of study. These
groups have given talks on England, Germany and Switzerland,
France, Ireland and Denmark, illustrated by maps, slides and
charts, and background and criticism of their assigned country’s
writers.

This classroom format will also
have its advantages when the
scholars are abroad. “Each group
will be our experts in their particular country when we're there,”
said Mr. Dalke.
The group specializing in Ireland will have the first chance
to show its expertise, as the
fairytale tour will begin in that
country. In England, they will

visit the homes of Beatrix Potter,
A. A. Milne, and Anne Hathaway.
The travellers’ visit to Paris
will take them to the homes of
the creators of Madeleine and
Babar the Elephant, Ludwig Bemelmans and Jean de Brunhoff.
The group will interview Maurice Druon, French author of
“Tistou of the Green Thumbs.”
The tour of Heidi’s Swiss surroundings will be followed by an
excursion to the Brothers Grimm
country around Frankfurt, Germany.

The last stop on the group’s
itinerary will be Copenhagen,
where they will visit Hamlet’s
Castle, the Frederiksborg Palace
and the Island of Funen birthChristian Ander-

place of Hans
sen.

Mr. Dalke, who has sometimes
been called “our storyteller” by
Orchard Park children, said,
“There isn’t one book we have
studied this summer that the
kids don’t love when it is read
to them. But more children are
not going to read them until
more teachers know them.”
Given the knowledge, European experiences, and happy
enthusiasm of Mr. Dalke’s teachers, children’s television programs may find some stiff competition from the classics.
A student with a special role is
Miss Lieve Vankerckhoeven, Mr.
Dalke’s Belgian born graduate
assistant, who will act as translator and travel aide for the
group. A former American Field
Service Exchange Student, Hiss
Vankerckhoven resides at 71
Weber Avenue, Buffalo.

Excavation of Iroquois Indian Sito

Summer Archaeology School
Excavates Indian Sites
the course. Preliminary study
was done on the site in 1950 while
the actual field work began only

By JULIE SULLIVAN

The Summer Field School in
Archaeology of the State University at Buffalo is currently conducting excavations on local In-

dian sites. The program, under
Dr. Marion E. White of the Anthropology Dept., has been designed primarily for Anthropology majors and graduate students
for the purpose of introducing
participants to all aspects of field
work.
Dr. White, her assistants, Dr.
Audrey Sublett and John Carbonara, and about twenty students
are excavating a ten acre site in
the Town of Ema which is believed to have been an agricultural village of the Niagara Frontier Iroquois.
Dr. White hopes that the project, which consists of tracing the
surrounding palisade and finding
house locations, will be successfully completed at the end of

last summer.
of the
A full re
culture of the people is being
attempted through clues attained
from the tools and artifacts located on the site.
The village, dating back to 1600
AJ)., consisted of rather large,
substantial houses constructed
with elm bark fastened onto
poles. A chemical discoloration
in the soil, called post molds, indicates the location of the posts,
allowing for the discovery of the
outline of the housing as well as
the bordering palisade.
The Second Session Summer
School course will end August
5th when students working for
credit and students from many
different parts of the country,
working on their own projects,
will have completed their summer training in field work.
»

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SPECTRUM

Friday, July 29, 1966

THUS

Review: PIGEONS and THE BLIND MEN
The Absurd and the Grotesque
were the subjects of The Workship Repertory Theatre of Buffalo’s dramatic productions presented July 22 and 23 in the Millard Fillmore Room.

Two one-

act plays, Pigeons, by Lawrence
Osgood and Michel de Ghelder-

ode's Tha Blind Mon, illustrated
two facets of contemporary theatre bound by the prevailing
conditions of life for the 20th
century man as a purposeless,
senseless, and incongruous existence. A contemporary aspect of
the plays resulted from the two
distinguishing concepts of modern theatre trend: the “poetic
avant-gard” theatre of de Ghelderode which strives toward the
lyrical, imagistic poetry of verbal associations, making it much
less violent and grotesque than
its counterpart, the Theatre of
the Absurd, which plays upon
the degenerate nature and devaluation of language in order
to elicit its poetry from the concrete and objective image of

Stage per se. as evident in Osgood’s Pigeons. The basic con-

siderations of the lacks of harmony, certainty, communications
of the human condition are essentially alike.
Osgood’s Pigeons

ed first

(and

was perform-

“who would have

thought the absurd could be so
funny”). It portrayed the situation of three women, all from obviously different social spheres:
Rosalind Cramer as the aloof upper class, dignified and elderly;
Esther Swartz as a middle-class
“social worker” who really has
no idea what’s happening; and
finally the rough-mouthed and
floozy lower classed member
played by Karlie Roth. The women are “exiled” into the garbageland of an empty lot in New York
City where they are cut off from
any external cues except those
which they bring within themselves. A power struggle ensues,
during which each faction attempts to gain control of the
group by its own idiosyncratic
-

means. The final threat of the
a “secret weapon" puts

use of

the reins in Miss Cramer’s hands.
She attempts to remold the other
two in a sort of new “socialization”, which ultimately results
in a final decay of any previous
class structure or order (regardless of the presence of the social
worker), as the women turn into
“pidgeons” and are last seen
strutting in a circle faster and
faster singing “My Bonny Lies
Over the Ocean” in an ascending

shrieking pitch. Why pigeons?
Pigeons are dull and scavenging
dirty birds who flock together
in the safety of a bellfry, never
venturing to the outer limits of
the skyway. Pigeons have bethey
come socialized animals
eat popcorn from the hand, strut
up and down the park avenues
cooing incomprehensibly. In Osgood’s play, the distinct parellels
between man as a “social being”
and the society of pigeons slowly
merge into one huge trilling and
flapping state of ridiculousness.
—

Task Force Memoranda
Meeting of July 15, 1966

Present were nine members
and a recording secretary.
The co-chairmen reported on
their conference of July 14 with
Dr. Furnas. They said that they
had stressed the facts that the
committee considered its responsibilities to the academic community of transcendent importance, that it planned (1) to hold
open hearings and (2) to study
governing procedures on this and
other campuses, and that, it the
results of the committee’s work
were to have genuine significance,
it must have secretarial and research assistance as well as funds
for such items as a telephone in
Norton Union, postage, and the
expenses contingent with recording testimony at the hearings and
reproducing minutes and memoranda. Dr. Furnas replied by urging that the committee submit
to his office a budget outlining
its needs for the current fiscal
year. He gave the impression that
a budgetary request would receive
careful consideration and, in fact,
suggested that travel expenses be
added to it to cover the possibilities of sending a committeeman to other campuses to study
their governing systems.
When the co-chairmen finished
their report it was proposed that
travel money could also cover the
expenses of bringing consultants
from other campuses to Buffalo.
The co-chairmen established a
subcommittee to meet and draw
up the budget proposal immediately after the committee had
adjourned.

In regard to the Medical-Dental
Student Association’s having representation on the Task Force,
the Graduate Student representatives reported that they had contacted the Association and it had
manifested considerable interest
in being represented. The committee decided that the co-chairmen should invite the Association
to send an interim observer to
committee meetings until such
time as it could elect a perma-

nent representative.

The committee agreed that, al-

though the Subcommittee on Organizational Analysis would have
difficulty in beginning its research until it had research as-

sistance, the Subcommittee on
Hearings could get to work immediately. The chairmen of both
subcommittees called meetings
for the 19th. It was felt that the
former subcommittee could at
least explore the possibilities of
making contacts on other campuses and availing itself of materials already existing on this

campus. The second subcommit-

the purposes outlined in its pro-

was instructed to consider

posed budget. In respect to the
third point, the Task Force after

The committee thought that the
best method for keeping Dean
Meyerson apprised of its work
would be to send him copies of
the memoranda as they were
made public.

due consideration decided that
$100 would not be sufficient even
for its work through the summer.
In the circumstances, it considered alternate sources for funds.
Recalling that its original plan
had been to ask only for emergency money to cover the period
until September 1, and agreeing
to return to this concept, the
committee decided to approach
the Faculty-Student Association
for an interim appropriation. The
co-chairmen were asked to communicate the formal application.

tee

what procedures should be followed to ensure that its hearings
would indeed be informative and
exhaustive.

Meeting of July 22, 1966

Present were eight members
and a temporary recording secretary provided by one of the members.
The proposed budet was the
first topic of business. The cochairmen reported that the ad
hoc budget subcommittee had met
and, following Dr. Furnas’ suggestions and the committee’s
guidelines, had prepared an annual budget which was delivered
to the President’s office on Monday morning, the 18th.
On Wednesday, the 20th, the
co-chairmen received a letter
from the President giving his
decision. This message was now
read to the committee. In substance Dr. Furnas wrote that the
adjustments involved in granting the committee’s request, that
1/12 of its proposed annual budget be allocated to cover its work
of the summer, could not be made
in the 1966-67 budget. His office
offered to make available $100
toward the committee’s secretarial expenses for the period until
September 1. Although the President’s reply did not address itself directly to the other ll/12’s
of the request it did among other
things suggest (1) that considering the additional on-campus obligations of its members, the Task
Force was setting itself too great
a task and (2) that all research
contingent with its work could
better be done by the members
themselves without the aid of
research assistance. The letter
concluded with the statement that
if Dr. Furnas’ successor desired
to modify the position implicit
in this letter he should feel free
to do so. (Dr. Furnas had sent
a copy to Dean Meyerson.)

The discussion which followed
the reading made obvious that
the committee was still convinced
of three things: (1) the immense
importance of its assignments and
responsibilities and the urgency
of its producing early and tangible evidence that it understands
this fact; (2) the magnitude of
its task if it is to discharge these
ultimate obligations and (3) the
absolute need for the funds for

Dr. Furnas had also been ap-

proached with a request that he
make available to the Task Force
copies of the newly proposed bylaws of the Faculty Senate. In a
second letter now read to the
committee, he replied that he
did not wish to release the bylaws until they had been considered by the whole Faculty Senate
and the SUNYAB Council, and
until he was satisfied that they
did not conflict with the policies
being developed at Albany.

The Chairman of the Subcommittee on Hearings now gave his
report. The subcommittee had
decided to hold two open hearings in August and to continue
hearings into the fall if necessary
to give all interested parties in
the academic community the opportunity to testify. The point
was emphasized, however, that although the number of hearings is
not limited, the sooner all testimony is heard the sooner the
subcommittee can submit its final
report. The members agreed that
when possible the hearings should
be held in midweek in order to
serve the larger number of people then on campus and that they
should be alternated between
afternoons and evenings to ease
conflicts with classes, meetings,

There were some very good
moments and laughs in this (recognizable?) situation. Esther
Swartz made her acting debut in
this play and exhibited a good

sense of stage presence, especially during a popcorn-eating scene;

KarMe Roth, however, turned in
the most outstandingperformance
of the trio, although the prevalent lusty laugh was somewhat
forced. On the whole, each ac-

tress performed emphatically,
complementing each other beautifully at times, especially in the

tonal modulations of voicos
low, deep-pitched and elegant for
the higher class representative;
the squeaky, whining speech of
the N. Y. social worker; and the
raspy, brawling bellow of the lowlife women. Director Joseph Krysiak deserves much credit for this
particular casting feat. I feel that
the play might have been better
if the actors had spoken a foreign language which the audience couldn’t understand. Obtrusive dialogue (which amounted
—

statement to the subcommittee.
The members expressed the
hopes (1) that interested campus
groups holding similar opinions
would send common spokesmen
to obviate needless repetition and
expedite the hearings; (2) that
when a prospective speaker first

contacted the subcommittee he
would state whether he represented himself or some group and
give some indication of what topic
he wished to discuss. (With this
advanced information, the committee can prepare itself for
garnering all possible benefit
from the testimony); and (3) that
speakers will hold in mind the
mandate of the Task Force and
direct their testimony to means
for implementing the two specific ends in view.
The co-chairman of the Subcommittee on Organizational Analysis reported for his subcommittee. Until they had research
assistance the members decided

/

what the play was about) such as:
“This is absurd” and a discussion
of the “natural order of things.”
and the repetitive sure-Iaugh-getter “shit-chat” (“stuff it up” and
"blow it out your ass”) was making the play into a cute wordburlesque. The message could
surely have been received by
just the vigorous and fast-moving,
slapstick-like action, coupled with
the auditory element previously
mentioned.
Just as the language detracted (purposely perhaps) from the
general staging of Pigeons, so did
it enhance de Ghelderode’s The
Blind Men. Much doesn't have
it
to be said about this play
was more of a poetic experience.
But a few points: the place is
Europe during the Middle Ages
—or today, if you will. The Blind
Men describes a universal condiensuing death
tion of all men
—and the illusory nature of his
quest for that "lost homeland”
—

—

(Cont’d on Pg. 7)

on two courses of action. First of
all, agreeing that the obvious
source of information on the present institutional structure of this
campus was the Office of Institutional Research, they planned
to invite Dr. Anderson, the head
of the office, to speak to the Task
Force on this subject. Secondly,
they would immediately put the
subcommittee in correspondence
with some twenty-five universities
and colleges at which circumstances exist comparable in various aspects to those at SUNYAB.
Three letters would be sent to
each institution —one to the undergraduate student association,
one to the graduate student association, and one to the office
of the president—each giving the
background and mandate of the
Task Force, the purpose of the
subcommittee, and a request for
the contacted parties to submit
whatever information they consider pertinent.

HOWARD

•V JOHRionJ Q\
FISH FRY):
J9
/

•
*

To get the hearings under way
the committee decided that announcements should gb to the
Spectrum and WBFO staling that
I he first hearings will be held
in Baird Hall (it is air conditioned) on August 10 and 11, and
asking all who wish to testify
to notify the subcommittee by
August 5. The notice would also
point out that anyone who pre
ferred could submit a wrillct

to a self-conscious explanation of

V

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��SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Cditoriai Comment

.

.

Friday, July 29, 1966

oCetterS to the (Editor

.

MY CAMPUS DOES
THE HANKY PANKY

The Forecast Is Hot

That this University now finds itself under attack from
various quarters regarding the new Amherst campus can
in large part be ascribed to the manner in which the enterprise was planned and the ostensible indolence in which
the plans are being effected.
From the beginning, the project has lacked the confidence of much of the academic community for a number
of reasons;
1) There seems to have been totally inadequate consultation with students, faculty, and alumni concerning a)
the location of the campus, b) the kind of campus these
groups desired, and c) some kind of mechanism by which
these groups could approve the final plans. To the latter
point, Planning and Development answered that the students
and faculty were not experts. It does not take an expert over
two years to take soil tests on 1000 acres of land. Nor do
experts find themselves claustrophobic in windowless, Kafkaesque lecture halls or choked by the dust of erstwhile
mudholes. Experts seldom live in their handiwork. Evidently Planning and Development has been consulting with various departments concerning what they need in the way of
facilities, but this seems hardly sufficient—it is after the
fact. Perhaps the students and faculty should each be given
the money to hire architectural consultants to make sure
their needs will be considered.
2) So far the original study of the five possible sites
(the Moore report) and the proceedings of the meetings
at which the Amherst site was chosen have not been released

to the public. This seems strange. Dr. Murray, Executive

Vice President of the State University, served on a “central
staff” which made the final approval of the Amherst site
off the Moore report. Moore made no specific recommendations but current rumor has it that the downtown waterfront
site was objectively the best location. This might explain
why none of the report or meetings memoranda have been
released—Amherst may not be the best of all possible sites.
3) The delays on construction and reasons given therefor can hardly be expected to gain the confidence of the
academic or outside community. While general planning
for space requirements, etc., continues unabated, other
seemingly primary areas of planning lag on. It has taken
over two years to take soil tests on the 1000 acres and they
have yet to be completed. The Spectrum talked to an architectural firm and was told that it should take a maximum
of seven months. Construction of buildings has also been
delayed possibly as late as the Spring of 1968. It has also
been recently discovered that there is not now and never
has been a planning schedule. Originally the project was
divided into three major phases.

Many questions remain. Perhaps the most important
of these is the wisdom of the Amherst site—certainly this
has been impugned by the manner in which the University
has planned and carried out its development. The time has
come for an open review of the whole issue. What confidence remains cannot but be bolstered by such a review.

THE TASK FORCE

TO THE EDITOR:
Rejecting, totally, the political,
theological, literary, philosophical and academic assumptions
which hinge our society to the
withered refrigerator of civilization (and which are, in any case,
rooted in stupidity and class interest) and insisting, moreover,
on our own irresistabie emotional
autonomy, we find it essential to
affirm, here and now, without
reservations and at any price, the
marvelous red and black validity
of absolute revolt, the only attitude worthy of survival in the
present millenium of streets and
dreams.
More than ever, with everything continually at stake, we
find it necessary to affirm the
impassioned use of the most
dangerous weapons in the arsenal
of freedom:

MAD LOVE: totally subversive,
the absolute enemy of bourgeois
culture;
opposed to literlike a machinegun, exterminating the blind
flags of immediate reality;

POETRY:

(as

ature) breathing

HUMOR: the dynamite and
guerilla warfare of the mind, as
effective in its own domain as
material dynamite and guerilla
warfare in the streets (when necessary, however, rest assured:
we shall use every means at our
disposal);
SABOTAGE; ruthless and relentless destruction of the bureaucratic and cultural machinery
of oppression.

.

.

ticians!

!

Long live the New Guinea tribe
who, aware of the stupidity of
technological civilization, massacred the managers of a washing-machine factory, took over
the buildnig and converted it
into a temple of the marvelous
but elusive Rabbit-god! !
Long live the youth of Fairbanks, Alaska, who, after being
forbidden by law to drop out of
school, retaliated by burning
down the schoolhouse! !
Long live the lunatic who escaped from an asylum and calmly
robbed a down-town bank only

to have his “sane” brother tell
The Man!

!

Long live Barry Bondhus of
Big Lake, Minnesota, who
dumped two buckets of shit into

the file drawers
board!!!

of his

draft

Long live the twelve Fort
Lauderdale, Florida, teens who,

prevented by their schools from
meaningful experimentation, independently began manufacturing
LSD, two sizes of plastic bombs,
smoke bombs and a varied and
catalytic assortment of revolutionary hardware! !
Long live the Incredible Hulk,
wildcat strikers, the Nat Turner
Insurrection, high-school dropouts, draft-dodgers, deserters, delinquents, saboteurs and all those
soul-brothers, wild-eyed dreamers,
real and imaginary heores of defiance and rebellion who pool
their collective resources in the
exquisite, material transformation of the world according to
desire!

!

!

!

The lucidity. of alley apples
and broken bottles have replaced
autumn leaves—the crushing subservience to authority scorched
by molotov cocktails of fantastic
destruction, and, far from finally,
the expressionless caress has
been deliciously transcended by
the touch that stimulates to unheard of heights the sensuous
pores of the only dynamism that
matters. As liberated souls (and
we are, for our guests cannot be
stopped now) we have necessarily
an historically enviable role as
cosmic architects armed with
hammers, electric guitars, and
apocalyptic visions, but more
significantly, armed with the exhilarating knowledge that we are
able to crush systematically all
obstacles placed in the way of
our desires and to build a new
Surrealist Group, Anarchist
Horde.

LSD Reveals Reality
TO THE EDITOR:

To those who are with or even
ingested Joel Myers’ insane comments re Gardiner and LSD
(Spectrum 16/53): Who isn’t a
product of his environment? Since
grammatically and hence experimentally when do environments
bomb and provide? What gives

this guy the authority (not to
mention knowledge) to refer to
LSD as deadly? What is the basis
for the hasty and unexplained
connection Myers draws between
LSD, narcotics, the Shah of Iran,
and heroin? Perhaps some of the
Spectrum readers are naive
all the more reason to take the
drug and from then realize that
—

there are no ‘deadly consequences,’ and that LSD reveals modern
realities as only it can. There is

.
no alternative. Agreeable
only if you want to unstick your
.

.

mental and emotional contraceptives. ‘We are in full control of
the situation’ said the biologist on
his way to the john.
Yours on earth alone

Advantages of Downtown Campus
TO VHE EDITOR:
I am greatly surprised that the
proposal to locate the new campus downtown or on the waterfront has not been given more
serious consideration. It would
seem to offer many advantages,
both to the student body and the
city of Buffalo as a whole. Because of the convenience to
stores and theaters, both students
and downtown merchants would
benefit as a result of this location. The proximity to the main
business district would also be
advantageous to students holding
part time jobs to help finance
their education.

The Task Force has run into its first snag with the
President’s Office. It seems that the “immediate need
of opening and maintaining a dialogue among students,
faculty, and administrative groups” (i.e., the mandate of
the Committee) was that of averting a Hayes Hall sit-in.
The Task Force now cannot even get sufficient financial and
secretarial aid from the President’s Office to further its
The greatest advantage, which
enterprise. (See the latest Memoranda in this issue.)
no one else has brought into disis the abundance of inThe Task Force considers itself independent of the cussion,
expensive housing within walking
President, at whose whim it began. This attitude resembles distance of the downtown locathat of the teenage son who likewise considers himself tion. This would be a distinct
independent of the old man until it comes time for money: advantage to students who wish
“Take out the papers and the trash/Or you don’t get no to live off campus for personal
spending cash.”
The President’s attitude toward the Task Force
must
be manifesting itself to everyone by now: the money and
help could be found if Furnas took it seriously. Obviously
the only way for the Committee to get things done is
to use
the present structure for its own ends and somehow bypass
the President’s Office. Furnas might not give the Task
Washington, D C., July 19—The
Force sufficient funds; he certainly would not disband
it Peace Corps
the second time
at this late date. The Committee must also always operate in its five andforone
half years is
under the onus of serving only an advisory function to the recruiting volunteers for a specifsame President who created the “legitimate channel”.
ic overseas assignment in Kenya,
where there is a critical need for
Let us hope that Mr. Meyerson will be a bit more teachers and land settlement
officers.
cooperative. The Committee seems to be serious about
their
The goal is for 160 volunteers
purpose, despite the lack of concern shown by Dr-. Furnas.
to begin training in mid-Septem.

It is necessary, at times (and
this is one of them) to speak
bluntly: we affirm deliriously
and simply the TOTAL LIBERATION OF MAN.
Long live the Negroes of Watts,
the Puerto Ricans of Chicago, the
Provos of Amsterdam, the Zengakuren of Japan and the youth
of all countries who burn cop
cars in the street and demonstrate by these exemplary manifestations that the struggle for
freedom cannot be guided by the
rulebooks of priests and poli-

or financial reasons. It would also
benefit the total urban renewal
program by bringing persons of
higher educational and social
backgrounds into blighted areas,
tending to upgrade the area and
decrease the social separation of
the middle class suburbanite and
the inner city resident. This
seems desirable. The Millersport
Highway location would inconvenience the students and many faculty members, while it might deal
an injurious blow to the already
depressed economy of downtown
Buffalo.

Other points that no one has
brought out before tend to sup-

port the same conclusion. There
is almost no off-campus housing
in the Millersport area that students could afford. This would
tend to penalize the student who
goes off campus for reasons of
economy. If someone could pay
high rent or support

an auto-

Peace Corps Recruitment
For Volunteers to Kenya
her and mid-October. The deadline for applications is August
15.
Applications can be obtained
from the Peace Corps Liaison on
campus, at the Post Office, or by
writing to Peace Corps. Completed applications should be sent
to Kenya Desk, Peace Corps,
Washington, D C, 20525.

mobile, however, the inconvenience would be minimal. The average student would probably
have to live in the dorms, even
if he could have previously found
more economical housing. I often
wonder if the administration has
considered the fact that this
might injure the very persons for
whom public education has been
designed. I wonder if they have
considered the abridgement of
freedom of choice involved in
such a policy. I also wonder if
they have considered the astronomical costs that would fall upon
the backs of the people of New
York if 90% of the out of state
students had to be housed in
dormitories.
I might point out in conclusion,
that if the University is to obtain
land downtown, it must act now.
A lakefront complex of high rise
buildings with a green belt between them could be most attractive, and the land in Amherst
would be available when the offspring of today’s youth need more
college space. In twenty years
U.B. may need three campuses.
This way it would be far more
feasible to provide for inevitable
urban and college expansion.

The use of the downtown location now, while holding more
land in reserve, would seem highly advantageous to the students,
the University and the people of
Buffalo, in the near future and
in the years to come.
Lewis Bowman

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                    <text>SUMMER

-J

—

__

VOLUME 16

m

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY

BUFFALO

h

REALISM AND

radicalism

22. 1966

NO.

SS

Outlook: Cold
Feasibility: Nearing Zero
It has happened again. The
student body has been left up in
the air on another aspect of U.B.
development—the new Amherst
campus. Everyone seems to know
what’s going on (or what isn’t
going on) but no one knows why.
Construction May Bo Delayed
This week it was hinted that
construction of the Amherst site
may or may not begin in the fall.
According to a somewhat flexible
schedule (certainly not a rigid
one), outlined last November by
Samuel B. Gould, State University
President, plans for the new campus extension were to be revealed
in May or June of this year.
Ground moving operations were
to have begun this summer and
the construction of dormitories
and recreational facilities was
scheduled for the fall. Until last
week, there was no mention of
even a possible change in plans.
Today, mid-summer 1966, the certainty of breaking ground in the
fall has turned into hopeful speculation on the part of the State
University Construction Fund in
Albany. In other words, one might
say, millions for planning but
not one sent for development.
Soil Testing Causes Delay
The University’s Office of Planning and Development pointed
out the importance of soil and
sub-surface testing and any delay
in construction will be caused
by the failure to complete the
testing. Soil testing began in 1964
and may be completed this fall.
This procedure is necessary to
determine building locations and
the shape, height, and load distribution suitable to the particular subsurface conditions of the
area.

There can be little doubt that
the soil tests are important but
isn’t two years stretching things
a bit? A twelve year old boy with
a Gilbert kit could probably have
done it in a couple of months.
What are they planning anyway,
sharecropping 500 acres for cotton?
What is most surprising is that
a project as large as this one
apparently is not as well-planned
as it should be. Why weren’t
these tests carried out previous
to the purchase? This is like buying through mail-order catalogue,
sight unseen. Should soil and subsurface testing be considered a
valid reason for delaying so large
an undertaking? If so, why does
something that should be a routine procedure take two years
to complete? These unanswered
questions lead to a great deal
of speculation. Perhaps soil testing is not the only reason (or
even the reason) for the delay.
Implications of Delay
Whatever the reasons may be,
any delay is certain to have widespread implications. Besides holding up the 11.7 million dollar
Lockport Expressway, the delay
will undoubtedly pose new problems for the University itself.
Does delay now mean that the
new campus will not be ready
in five years? If it is not ready
by that time, will the temporary
annex buildings on our present
campus be useable? (We learned
last week that they were built
to last five years). Will a delay
in moving require more construction of buildings on the present campus—temporary or otherwise? Failure to begin construction this fall may have serious

reprecussions.

May arson May Hava Rola

It has been rumored that Hr.
assume the

Meyerson, who is to

September I, 1966,
would have liked to have had
some say in the choosing of a
site and the planning of a new
campus. It is also a possibility
that Planning and Development
deem it wise to consult the president-designate before
going
ahead with the project.
Mr. Meyerson is Dean of the
School of Environmental Design
at the University of California
at Berkeley and highly qualified
to venture an opinion in this
type of deveolpment. Consulting
him on this matter would probably be a good idea.
Mr. Meyerson has said that he
believes the decision to build in
Amherst is irreversable. One
would think that a decision as
important as the location of a
university would have been carefully made and that there would
be no need or desire to reverse
the decision. However, if before it
is begun, it seems better to locate the campus elsewhere, then
reconsideration of the Amherst
site is in order.
Decision Made at One Meeting
In choosing the present site,
the State University Board of
Trustees, in one meeting on June
11, 1964, voted unanimously to
adopt a resolution to use the Amherst site for the new campus
extension. Most of the land was
then purchased. (The University
is still trying to purchase about
forty private lots within the proposed site).
The Board acted on information compiled between January
and April of 1964 by Vincent J.
Moore. Mr. Moore was chosen for
the research because he had previously worked for the Buffalo
City Planning Commission. Evidently, to the satisfaction of the
Board, this research justified the
presidency

purchase.

Possible Alternate Site
When the Amherst site was
first considered, another possible
location mentioned was downtown Buffalo. A location along
perhaps the only) contender for
Amherst. Now there appears to
be a revitalized interest in the
waterfront area. The advantages
of such a location include convenient accessibility to the campus and the nearness of the cam-

area could prove to be most advantageous financially.

Much Untold
Basically, what we want to
know are the answers to a few
straight-forward questions. Concerning a possible delay: How
long does it take to make soil
tests? Is this the only reason
for the delay and if not, what is?
Why was there no definite schedule in the first place? Concerning the question of location: Was
sufficient research done to justify the Amherst purchase and was
the research done solely in the
best interests of the University?
Should we reconsider the waterfront as a better location for the
University? Time is short and
growing shorter.
In general dealings concerning the new campus appear to be
clouded in mystery. Much remains to be told. We cannot be
satisfied with what we have. The
search will continue.

tRISON

AN INTERVIEW:

Paul Carter-Harrison

Paul Carter-Harrison, artist-inresidence who lives in Holland,
will present two of his own plays,
Pavana for a Dead-Pan Minstrel
and Top Hal, on July 29, 30. 31
and August 5, 6, 7. The Baird
Hall performances, directed by
Mr. Harrison, will be the American premieres for both plays.
In an interview with the Spectrum, Mr. Harrison commented
upon a variety of subjects, most
of which refer to his plays.
“Stylistically, the plays are
eastern European in that they
show a visible influence of Polish
mime theatre and Brechtean development. Liguistically, there is
an observable influence of Beckett and Pinter. The plays deal
with contemporary problems in-

But since we are doing them in
America, they will be more controversial.

“Pavane, for example, deals
with the black-white syndrome
Slapstick, mime, and vaudeville
minstrel-type playing are integrated to bring the play to its
The vehicle
tragic conclusion.
used to effect this is the dance,

pus to downtown Buffalo facilishopping areas, theaters,
ties
hotels, etc. Some of the disadvantages discussed were the problems around the Thruway, the choreographed by Eleo Pomare,
inability to expand, and the poswho had to teach the actors how
sible harshness of winter weather. to dance. The problem of the
(The latter presents a minor probplay involves the exchange of
lem since architectual design identities between a black and
most
could eliminate
of the bad white man so that they may play
effects).
at seducing girls in cafes. In
Let us make it clear that if doing so they live up to the
these are the reasons for delay—- cliches which the masks (literally)
i.e., to consult Mr. Meyerson and entail. Only tragedy can come
to consider a possible alternate from clicked behavior.
location, we feel that these are
“Top Hat is musically orchessound reasons. Naturally, no one
wants to see the building of our trated. It brings together a munew campus delayed but it may sician, a woman speaker, and a
man. The man, who is forced to
be better to re-examine the situation if there are uncertainties. mime because the woman has all
has
Once building is underway, the the lines, is a tramp who
decision is irreversible, so let’s be hitherto lived according to his
own volition. His life has been
sure.
Maybe the new extension could aborted by a rich woman who
be built in the waterfront area seduces him in a park. Subseand, if so, there should be no quently he is transported around
remorse over the purchase of the the world in a sexual fantasy.
Amherst site. The land will un- Having lost his direction, he is
doubtedly retain its value and, destroyed. The symbolic referin fact, most probably be worth ence of the tramp’s downfall is
more. The location is ideal for the man absorbed by the Estaba housing development and the lishment who is no longer able
desire of government officials to to function by his free will.”
When asked if this reference
build an expressway through the
—

PAUL

referred to himself. Mr. Harrison
replied that it is “a generalized
reference. I think of myself as
a fairly free person: that is, fairly
free of institutional life. Top
Hat's syntax is in terms of music.
It is written aiong the lines of
Brechtean conception of alienation. I am concerned with what
is happening and want the audience to become aware of itself.
Above all. atrophy is entertaining The motif of this play cannot be realized without the proper combination of lighting, movement, and sound.”
Asked why he lives in Holland,
the playwright answered. “One
lives in Europe simply because
it gives one distance from which
to view the American scene. The
foreign reference gives one a
sense of proportions. One can
look much more closely at one’s
self and at the same time be able
to look back. Retrospection becomes more defined. The definition of one's self in America is

not as clear.

“Europe has greater sources
of the theatre that I’m interested

in than America. The American
stage is too parochial. Harold
Clurman has suggested that most
of the playwrights seem to be
getting their ’seminal influence’
from Albee. The economic situation leads playwrights to take
fewer chances. They produce the
same themes, styles, etc.
“People tend to consider me in
relation to my contemporaries
(eg. Baldwin. Jones), but they
are not my contemporaries in
what they are doing. And they
certainly are not because they
are black. Baldwin is not theatrically interesting for me because
his rhetoric tends to become sentimental. Jones' rage makes him
impotent and his craft is too limited, even though I agree with
some of the things be is doing.
If anyone can be considered my
contemporary it would be Conrad
Bromberg
“Essentially I am not a very
ambitious man: that is, I do not
work for the satisfaction of great
publics. I'm a man that prefers
to rest under the palmtrees somewhere and then, once I begin to

work, I work very hard. That
liberty cannot be taken in America. The economic and social
pressures are too great. In Europe. I don't have to keep up
with anything by myself.
“In my book of essays published in Holland, Modern Drama
Footnote, I comment on

Cage's

Lecture on Nothing (which Mr.
Harrison presented here two
weeks ago). The metrics of the
lecture usually evoke a ritualistic
response from the audience. Due
to the repetitious nature of the
‘lecture’ they respond to the suggestions of somnolence by becoming bored or going to sleep and
'that is a pleasure.' If you can
accomplish this in drama, you’ve
done something.

“1 have no

political

views. In

America everyone seems concerned with intergroup relationships.
I’m not interested in that; I’m
interested in one to one relationships as opposed to categorically

accepting whole groups.
"One of my plays, The Leader,
takes the leadership of the quasirevolution of American Negroes
to task. In the play the leadership is given the responsibility
of negotiating with a white liberal woman who has a Negro lover.
Sexuality obtrudes on the goals
of the meeting and it collapses.
'The leadership of the Negro
movement in America seems to
be slightly impotent. They cannot
establish a common goal because
they are fractionalized. Personal
interests render their actions impotent. What end can revolution
come to in this country? There
must always exist a master-slave
relationship. I am not an egali-

tarian. This conflict creates a
tension which makes societies interesting. Revolution does not
create equality. It merely reestablishes the master-slave relationship with different personnel. I consider this to be part of
the absurdity of human behavior.
If one is to call the Negro movement a revolution, this is what
he is talking about. Rebellion
would be a more accurate term.

“I consider myself apolitical,
but I am aware of political developments around the world. That
too is an absurdity."

�PAM TWO

Annual Graves

Memorandum III
EDITOR’S NOTE: The Special
Task Force Committee was created (1) to inquire into and make
proposals with respect to establishing an open and continual
dialogue among students, faculty
and administrators, and (2) to
make such proposals as it deems

The University’s annual celebration of the birthday of Robert Graves (July 24, 1895) will
feature an exhibit of the poet’s
manuscripts and first editions
in the poetry room of the Lockwood Memorial Library, July 24
through August 31. The display
will include original manuscripts
of many of the author's important

appropriate regarding organizational means for participation by

these groups in the formulation
of educational policy in the University. The committee is composed of both students and faculty elected by their representative
governing bodies. Shortly after
each of its meetings it will make
available proceedings memoranda
at the candy counter in Norton
Union. The Spectrum will also
print each memorandum. The following is the report of the third

poems.

Robert Graves has been writing
poetry since 1914 and considers
himself, in spite of his many
works on non-fiction, a poet above
all else. His stature as a poet,

his great warmth of spirit, and
his beneficient influence on
younger poets cannot be overemphasized.
Graves has also been acclaimed
as a novelist, cultural and religious historian, essayist, trans-

meeting:

lator, critic and classicist. He is
one of the most prodigious
authors alive. While his scholarship has never been questioned,
his books have often aroused
great controversy.
The most complete collection
of Grave’s manuscripts in the
World is housed in the University’s Lockwood Memorial Li-

Memorandum III
Meeting of July 9, 1966
Present were the complete
committee of ten and a recording
secretary.

Robert Grave* at Heme en Majorca

New Faculty Appointments for '66- 67
Number 131 Include Robert Creeley
The appointment of 131 new
faculty members for the 1966-6?
academic year have been announced by the State University
at Buffalo.
New appointments are:

les J. Mode; Philosophy, Dr.
William F. Edwards; Physics, Dr.
Shigeji Fugita; Political Science.

PROFESSORS

Education —Dr. Charlse Kiser,
Dr. Charles Gvaerick, Dr. Gerald
Rising, Dr. Aubrey H. Roden.
Engineering—Civil, Dr. Emmanuel Partheniades; Chemical,
Dr. Julian Szekely.

bert Scigliano, Dr. Lester W.
Millgrath, Dr. Robert Spencer.
Education—Dr. E. D. Duryea,
Dr. Walter Petty (professorial
lecturer).

Engineering—Civil. Dr. Simon
Ince (visiting professor).
Law—Dr. William H. Angus.
Dr. Daniel J. Gifford.
Medicine—Pathology, Dr. An
and P. Chaudhry.

ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS
College of Arts end Sciences—
Chemistry, Dr. Albert Padwa, Dr,
Albert Hershberger, Dr. Garry A.
Bechnitz; Drama and Speech, Dr.
Charles R. Petrie, Jr.; English.
Burton Raffel, Dr. Taylor Stoehr;
Geological Science, Dr. Paul H.
Reitan; Mathematics, Dr. G. R.
Blakely, Dr. Donald R. Ostberg;
Mathematical Statistics, Dr. Char-

Clark Gym Open
The swimming pool in Clark
Gym will open to faculty and
staff from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Mondays through Fridays, and
from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. on
Tuesdays and Thursdays for the
University personnel and their
families. Other recreational activities, including badminton, bas-

ketball, and handball, will be
available daily from 1:30 p.m.
to 3:30 pm.

The first item on the agenda
a report made by the cochairmen and Professor Sapp on
their telephone conference call
of July 5, with Dean Meyerson.
The conversation covered a number of points:
was

brary.

Mathematics, Dr. Nicholas Findler (jointly with
computing
center). Dr.
John Hyhill, Dr
Maria Wonenburger; Music, Dr.
Henri Pousseur (visiting Slee
professor); Physics, Dr. Mendel

22. 1966

Task Force:

Birthday Party

College of Arts end Sciences—
Biology, Dr. James F. Danielli,
Dr. Waiter G. Rosen; Chemistry,
Dr. Arthur N. Hambly (visiting
professor); English, Robert Greeley (visiting professor). Dr. Patricia J. Thomson (visiting professor); History, Dr. John T. Krause.
Dr. Arthur J. Marwick (visiting
professor). Dr. Clifton K. Yearley,

Friday, July

SPECTRUM

Dr. Lloyd V, Blackenship (jointly
with graduate school of Business
Administration); Psychology, Dr.
Dean G. Pruitt.

ASSISTANT PROFESSORS
College of Arts and Sciences—
Anthropology, Dr. Kenneth F.
Otterbein, Dr. Albert T. Steegraan, Dr. Robert Harvey, Dr.
Roy A. Jensen; Chemistry, Dr,
Orville Beachley; Classics, Dr.
John J. Peradotto; English, Dr.
Max A. Wickert, Dr. Victor A.
Doyno, Dr. Bruce H. Jackson, Dr.

Dr. Richard A. Mitchell; Mathematics, Dr. Kim L. Cheu, Dr.
Akiko Kino, Dr. Jean-CIaude
Deredrian; Music, Dr. James W.
McKinnon; Philosophy, Dr. Robert L. Martin (jointly with Mu
sic). Dr. Antoinette M. Paterson;
Physics, Dr. Robert J. Hull; Political Science, Dr. Jerome Slater,
Dr. Lyman A. Kellstedt; Sociology, Dr. Daniel Yutzy.
Dentistry—Dr. Elliot N. Gale
(behavioral science).

Education—Dr. Andrew Halpern and Dr. Jeremy Finn.
Engineering—Mechanical, Dr.
Gerald Francis; Interdisciplinary
Studies and Research, Dr. Ronald

Wichner.
Law—Dr. Barbara A. Kulzer.
Medicine—Anatomy, Dr. Chester Glomsld, Dr. Paul Milley;

Creative Craft

Center

The Creative Craft Center in
Rooms 7 and 0, Norton Hall, will
be open June 6 through August
26, Mondays through Fridays
from 11 a m. to 4 p.m., and Tuesday and Thursday evenings from
7 p.m. to 10 p.m. During the
Summer only, spouses of students,
faculty, and staff may enroll in
Craft Center programs. For further information, call the Center,
Ext. 3546.

Pediatrics, Dr. Charlotte Catz,
Pharmacy —Dr. Milo Gibaldi.
Social Welfare—Dr. Lewis J
Bowyer, Dr. William Morris, Dr.

Stanley Wass.
Lecturers (rank of assistant
professor contingent upon completion of Ph.D. College of Arts
and Sciences—Ant., Christopher

Jones; Classcis, Ronald A. Zirin;

English, Carl Dennis, Frederick
S. Plotkin, Royal Roussel, Neil
Schmitz, John T. Ogden; Economics, James R. Crotty, John T,
Rowntree, Jr.; Geological Science,
Dennis F. Hodge; History, Reginald A. Bowler, Lewis C. Perry,
Lawrence A. Schneider.

INSTRUCTORS
College of Arts and Sciences—
English, Albert G. Glover; Modern Languages, Patricio Estelle.

Coad, Barna Szabo.
Medicine—Thomas Flanagan.
LECTURERS
College of Arts and Sciences—
Anthropolyogy, Burton Pasternak; Art, Gerald Needham;
Drama nad Speech, Manual Grossman, Frederick J. Skalny; Eco
nomics, Sugwoo Kim; Geography,
Donald W. Kolbert; History, John

A. Larkin: Mathematics, Dr.
Arthur H. Stroud (jointly with
computing center), Michael Strzelec; Modern Languages, Ross
D. Hall; Music, Jerome Noble;
Philosophy, Shinjo Kawaski, Kah
K. Cho (visiting lecturer), Charles
N. Pailthrop; Political Science,
Psychology,
Martin J, Plax;
Gloria L. Roblin, Ronald E.
Schaub; Sociology, Charles King,
Norma L. Scavilla, Robert P,
Snow.

India Association
Program
The India Association of Buffalo will entertain eleven Indians
visiting the Buffalo area in an
informal gathering tonight in
Norton Union, Room 340, from
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
The visitors are participants
in the “Experiment in International Living” program.

1, The Task Force spokesmen
informed the Dean that the committee is an elective body, responsible to the students and
faculty and operating independent of the office of the president.
They agreed, however, that its
work will be facilitated if it has
the advice and counsel of the incoming administration.
2. When asked how he visualized the committee’s role, the
Dean countered by asking how
the committee construed its role.
The spokesmen replied by reiterating the substance of the committee’s first meeting and, at the
Dean’s request, by directly quoting its original mandate.

3. In answer to the Dean’s question, the spokesmen said the
committee did not consider its
tenure to be indefinite. It considered itself as owing to its

constituency a specific obligation
which could conceivably lead to
its drawing up a set of rules or
a constitution to provide formal
procedures for communication
and decision making on this cam-

4. The

Dean declined a request

that he spell out those matters
which he considered largely administrative in character as distinct from policy making. He said
that ideally such distinctions

would be unnecessary, that if the
proper dialogue were established all decisions which affected
academic life and educational
policy would be subject to review.
He added that he had always
thought of himself as a faculty
member first and an administra-

tor secondly.

5. The Dean agreed that the
Task Force should at once get
on with its work. The spokesmen
then explained the two activities
which the committee had initially laid out for itself:
a. A study to establish what
the present governing bodies of
this institution are, what their
official and unofficial functions
are, and what systems exist for
both the formal and informal exchange of ideas among them.
Here the Dean added that the
committe should also study existing situations on other campuses. He suggested that out of
this investigation could come one
of three recommendations: (I)
retain the present apparatus (2)
create new apparatus for more
democratic discussion and response, or (3) strengthen the roles
of the student and faculty sen-

ates.

b. Open hearings at which interested individuals or represen-

tatives of interested groups in
the academic community could
present their views and make
recommendations. Here the
spokesman stressed that such testimony could define the problems
and spell out some of the means
of solution. The Dean said he
would support purposeful and
fruitful hearings.
6. The Dean implied that once
he was installed as president he
would provide the committee
with whatever clerical and research help it required to discharge its mandate. In the meantime he suggested that the committee avail itself of conclusions
deriving from other investigations on campus such as the findings of the Office of Institutional
Research or the results of the
reorganization of the Faculty Sen-

ate.
After hearing the report on
the telephone conference the
committee members agreed that
in order to begin their work now
they must have immediate clerical and research assistance, and
an assigned office large enough
for their meetings and for staff
work. The co-chairmen reported
that they had scheduled a conference with Dr. Furnas at which
they would present the committee’s case for assistance during
the interim period.
Attention was called to the opportunity offered by the presence
on campus during the 'summer
of persons of unusual experience
at other universities both in this
country and abroad. The Task
Force might find these visitors
an excellent source for information on experiments and innovations that have succeeded (or
failed) on other campuses. The
committee agreed to initiate the
necessary contacts.
The members now decided that
the time had come to divide themselves into two subcommittees,
one to work on organizational
analysis and the other to prepare
for and hold open hearings.
When the findings of these two
committees had been reported, a
third committee would be created to correlate them and to make
specific recommendations. As appointed by the co-chairmen the
membership of the subcommittees are as follows:

1. Organizational Analysis
Hawkland, chairman; Mr. Kim Darrow; Dr. Raymond Hunt; Mr. Dennis Miller.
—

Dean William

co-chairman;

Mr.

Jon Simpllcto.

Professor Allen
2. Hearings
Sapp, chairman; Mr. Donald
Ames; Dr. Rollo Handy; Mr. John
Hellriegel, cochairman; Dr. John
—

Milligan.

At the same time that the subcommittees were at work the
members felt that regular meetings of the whole committee
should continue to ensure accomplishment and to keep everyone in touch with progress.
The committee agreed to look
into the question of the MedicalDental Student Association being
represented in its membership.

SOFTBALL
Standings through July IB
W
L
4
Psychology
0
Chemistry
4
1
Biology
2
1
3
Nuclear Center
2
Physics
3
2
Adm. &amp; Records
1
2
English
1
3
0
3
Education
Scores
Physics 5, Nuclear Center 3:

Wixon

(W).

Psychology 5, Chemistry 1:
Laughery (W), Dinan (L).
Adm. &amp; Rec. 8, English 5: Sanford (W), Feldman (L).
Chemistry 25, Education 6: Klein
(W).

English 13, Physics 9: Feldman
(W), Wixon (L).
Chemistry 5, Nuclear Center 2:

Dinan

(W),

Bickel

(L).

�Friday, July 22, 1966

PAM THRU

SPECTRUM

IM®Q2

Research Center Trustees
Rename Furnas President

M SLrman

I have always believed that one of the
most important criteria for judging a director’s cinematic creativity is the ability
of the director to fluctuate between styles
as deftly and subtlely as a person’s own
mfental processes. Irvin Kreschner (director
of A Fine Madness), and Joseph Losey (director of Modesty Blaise), are both good directors, but neither are able to capture that
illusory motion (the only “reality” is the
projected celluloid at any given moment)
which is the aesthetic landscape of film.
Both A Fine Madness and Modesty Blaise
demand this shifting of cinematic gears;
neither film has it.

in Modesty Blaise, is never merely adequate.
She is either superb or terrible—in this film,
terrible. And even her angst-ridden face (she
has the most interesting facial features of
any actress in contemporary cinema) cannot
hide the fact of her extreme discomfort in
the part. The rest pf the cast, however, is
first-rate; especially Dirk Bogarde, who for
the past ten years, has been turning in masterful performances in a startling variety
of roles.

Too often through the film it seems
like Losey trying to direct like DeBroca trying to direct like Godard. There is a central
paradox around which the film is based:
Elliott Baker, who wrote the novel A Losey wants to make the definitive statement
Fine Madness, and the screenplay created in about the absurdity of the camp sensibility
the character of Sampson Shillitoe, anarchic and at the same time, seems hell-bent on
poet-rebel, a hero typical of the hero of the making a campy film. He fails for the same
American novel of the 1960’s. Shillitoe, like reason Kerschner does
he cannot fluctuRandle Patrick McMurphy (the influence of ate styles, shift gears, deftly enough. Perhaps
Kesey’s novel on Baker is obvious) lives in the attempt was doomed from the start since
the most satisfying camp is unconscious
isolation as a life-style, refuses to accommodate himself to the social community, and camp. Louis Feullade’s Les Vampires is a
uses laughter as the strategy by which to more accomplished work of art than Georges
cope with the chaos of the human condition. Franju’s Judex, for example.
The film simplifies the issues of the novel and
entertainingly captures Shillitoe’s surface
There are plenty of entertaining mobravado but fails to get at the core of the ments in Modesty Blaise just as there are
man. For example, on one level of meaning, in A Fine Madness; most of them occur when
the film is a tough-minded put-down of both Bogarde is on camera—the perfect image of
law and psychoanalytic formalism (both symthe “queer hand which stokes the campfire”
bolic of man’s social will), but these symbolic as one writer puts it. Bogarde’s de-wigging;
pillars of established society seem to be criti- the op-art parody of Antonioni’s penchant
cized as not an integral part of the filmic for filming Vitti’s disintegrating psyche on
content, but as a substitute for Kerschner’s a background of a white wall; the opening
inability to effectively communicate (as
Baker did in his novel) that “fine madness” titles and the rescue ending; the Jeanette
of the great poet. One can almost sense MacDonald-Nelson Eddy song duet parodies;
Kerschner’s frustrated rage as he has his many good moments, but only flashes. Losey’s
hero flail out against the stereotypes he has pacing has always been slow, and the treatset up in place of the complex characters ment always heavy-handed; but it is more
Baker had created.
objectionable here, in comedy, than in his
naturalistic
melodramas.
Although Sean Connery overacts, he is
quite adequate as Samson Shillitoe (was ConBoth Kerschner and Losey have proven
nery’s brilliant performance in The Hill a
themselves
to be talented directors within
one-shot fluke?), but “adequate” is not
Shaw,
but
a
limited
sphere of operations. Their best
enough. The role required Robert
then Shaw’s name on a billboard has no drawworks (especially Kerschner’s The Luck of
ing power. The same for the rest of the cast Ginger Coffey) are very good indeed. Both
—merely adequate.
A Fine Madness and Modesty Blaise are worth
seeing. But both are, ultimately, failures.
the
title
role
Monica Vitti, who plays
—

Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, retiring
president of the State University
of New York at Buffalo, has been
re-appointed president and named
chief executive'officer of the University’s Western New YorS Nuclear Research Center by the
Center’s board of trustees. The
appointment is for a two-year
term, effective September 1.
Dr. Furnas was instrumental in
the late 1950’s along with Mr.
James Evans, the Center’s vicepresident in charge of program
development, in a drive to have
the Center constructed on the
then University of Buffalo campus. Dr. Furnas is retiring August 31 as head of the University
because of a compulsory State
age requirement. He is 65 years
old.

Dr. Furnas’ successor, Mr. Martin Meyerson, presently Dean of
the College of Environmental Design at the University of California at Berkeley, has 'been appointed chairman of the Center’s
board of trustees. The appointment is effective September 1,
the same day Mr. Meyerson becomes president of the University.
In announcing the appointments, Dr. Ralph R. Lumb, director, general manager and vicepresident of the Center, said:
“I am delighted that Mr. Meyerson will be chairman of our Board
of Trustees and that Dr, Furnas,
following his retirement from the
Presidency of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has

been elected President of the
Western New York Nuclear Research Center. Certainly his active participation in the management of the Research Center will
be welcome and is bound to enhance its growing contribution
to the academic, medical and industrial community. Dr. Furnas’
long experience and active participation at the state and federal
levels of highest importance,
brings to the Research Center a
prestige of which the Center is
very proud. I feel that the community at large will be just as
pleased with this announcement
as we are.”
Mr. Evans lauded the appointment of Dr. Furnas. “The Nuclear Research Center is flattered to have Buffalo's most distinguished citizen as its president.
It will be enriched by his presence, his enthusiasm, and his
drive. As the image and reputa-

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tion of the Center has grown over
the past few years, I feel that
this appointment of Dr. Furnas
represents a recognition of the
Center’s stature and maturity.
It also pays tribute to those local
industries that backed us and to
the state and federal agencies
whose cooperation made the Center possible.”

Dr. Furnas, who has served as
president of the University since
1954, began formulating plans for
the Center soon after his appointment to head the University. With
the assistance of Mr. Evans, a

fund-raising campaign was initiated in an effort to raise funds for
the Center.
With substantial gifts received
from local industry and the federal government, Dr. Furnas requested $1 million from the State
government. While a bill appropriating $1 million for the Center
was approved by the State Senate
and Assembly, it was vetoed by
the then Gov. Averill Hardman.
Gifts were received locally from
Bell Aircraft. Carborundum, Columbus McKinnon, Cornell Aeronautical Laboratories, the Courier-Express and Houdaille Indus-

tries. In addition, the National
Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation contributed grants to the project.
Following the election of Gov.
Nelson Rockefeller in 1958, Senator Walter Mahoney introduced
a bill on February 24, 1959 requesting a similar $1 million appropriation for the Center. The
bill was approved and the Center
soon became a reality.
At the present time, Dr. Furnas
is also serving as a member of
the following scientific organizations: Naval Research Advisory
Committee, Army Scientific Advisory Panel and of the Panel
on Science and Technology of the
House of Representatives Committee on Science and Astronautics.
He is chairman of the Advisory
Council for the Advancement of
Industrial Research and Development (for the State of New York)
and a member of the Science Advisory Council to the Legislature.
He is a member of the boards of
directors of the Aerospace Corporation, Carborundum Company,
Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory,
Inc. and the Manufacturers and
Traders Trust Company.

�PAGE FOUR

Friday, July

SPECTRUM

Third in

22. 19M

a Series

REALISM and RADICALISM
by JAMES HANSEN
Why is it that we students,
for all our legitimate complaints,
have failed to see our objectives
realized? With all the vitality of
the American university students,
why is it that nothing concrete
ever happens? Some might answer that if only a greater percentage of us were “seriously"
interested in acting out alternatives to the status quo, than
things would really start to move.
Most of us have heard this familiar sentiment echoing off the
walls of meeting rooms. This is
the hopeful “drama of numbers"
so often praised. I believe such
an answer too weak to provide
the base for the much needed
reappraisal of the “radical” programs. I suggest instead that we
come to grips with the problem
of just why the small coterie of
“revolutionaries” in the universities fails to achieve a notable
consensus. One way to do this
is to ask whether or not the
“demands” are realistic, given
the objective conditions of the
contemporary university as it
functions within the overall social structure.

I would like to look at some
of the views which are supposed
to lead the students out of their
apathy. If these programs are
contradictory or not grounded in
the realities of the situation,
how, and why, is the general
student community supposed to
react? For if the leadership is
confused and divided, then to
ask the masses of students to
follow is to ask of them naive
acceptance of an at best murky
program.
There are frequently offered
two interrelated “solutions" that
have, in my view, prevented the
students from mounting any effectual opposition to the centers
of repression in the university.
One of these is illustrated by
those who call for the “autonomy” of the university. The Spectrum editorial of July 8 provides
a good example:
as the uni.

.

versity becomes increasingly involved with society, its complicity in society’s evils increases
proportionately.” Are we to conclude, following the lead of this
statement, that by separating itself from society the university
will not be implicated in the
brutalities carried out within
(and without) the society? Or,
better yet, should the university
separate itself from social issues?
What must be examined here is
the relationship of the university’s involvement in social matters and the guilt that is supposed to accompany this “complicity.” Couldn’t we somehow work
against the status quo? I would
agree that given our (quasitotalitarian) social conditions, the
hope that a university would
directly oppose the status quo is
naive. However, given these very
same conditions, to argue for university “autonomy” is to neglect
one's social obligations to all
those not protected by the sanctuary of the university (the unjust and class-biased selection for
the armed services constituting
but one case of such discrimination.) If we insist on clamoring
for university “autonomy,” we
shall directly find ourselves arguing for the “Leisure of the
Theory Class.” It would seem that
this would be an unacceptable
solution to those seriously interested in eliminating “society’s
evils.” In short, what we should
do is actively to engage “our”

institution in whatever ways feasible to combat social wickedness.
Needless to say, to do so requires
the university’s involvement with
society.

What paths are open to us?
Where should we start, and how
far can we reasonably expect to
go? In the same issue of the
Spectrum, Bill Harrell claims
that “if we cannot resolve the
number and complexity within
the academic setting, how can
we expect to do so in the larger
society?" This is the kind of
“revolution by education” that is
foursquare in the tradition of
American liberalism. Note that

Mr .Harrell’s suggestion does not
deal with specific actions (like
refusing nuclear research grants),
but rather presents a sort of
internal effecting-external sociological viewpoint. I suggest that
the argument be reversed; the
structural metamorphosis of the
university is a function of the
structural metamorphosis of the
society within which that university functions. Certainly there
are actions that could be taken
by those within the university
(e.g., the English faculty’s united
opposition to managed news), but
it seems to me that to expect the
sort of vast changes desired by
Mr. Harrell requires tackling the
general structure first. At this
point I should emphasize that the
relation of the university to its
social framework is terribly complex. It seems to me that we are
not here dealing with two distinct entities. I think that if we
keep this in mind we might be
less prone to accept the muddleheaded solutions of people like
Jacques Barzun. Undue emphasis
on any one factor is pretty dangerous stuff. It tends to lead to
submission. Nevertheless, I still
think that if we are to get sweeping changes, we should exert
pressures on crucial structural
factors. But I get ahead of myself.
-

What would happen if we heeded Mr. Harrell’s advice and organize from “within?” (The position sounds like the view that
the only way to change the corporate machinery is to join it and
fight from within.) If the university were radicalized, this
would presumably mean that it
would function more rationally.

In which case it would oppose
itself to the irrationality of the
general social structure. Then
the government would cease contributing funds for grants, roads,
research facilities, land, buildings, and a myriad of other
things needed for the maintenance of the modern university.
Are we willing to forego these?
I don’t think that we should delude ourselves on this point. The
modern university needs public
and private monies. I am not
saying that we should just give
up and agree to all demands (or,
really, agree to any). I am suggesting, however, that if we expect to alter fundamentally the
university, we shall have to attend to “outside” matters. If we
emphasize changing the overall
structure of the society, then we
shall start to see the university
change. (This argument, changed
when necessary, makes the Urban
League’s refusal to concern itself wwith Vietnam look silly. In
turn, the position of SNCC and
CORE seem very sensible.) The
who matter of institutional relations is a tricky one, but I really
don’t think that by changing the
structure of one of the factors
we will force the whole society
to wake up.
Now then, how are these two
arguments related? The second
argument (internal change effect-

ing external change) presupposes
the first argument (the “autonomy argument”). If the university

is to alter itself from within,
would seem that it would have
be independent of the society
a whole. On the other hand,

it
to

as
if

it is accurate to say that we
should change “OUR” institution
before we can expect to see more
general changes (as Harrell does),
then how are we to effect these
changes? For, as the “autonomy
argument” maintains, our involvement would only implicate
us in “society’s evils.” What do
we do? Of incompatible arguments, neither of which seems
to have taken account of the contextual realities, which are we
to embrace?
It is a dictum of effective political action that we “make do
with what we have,” albeit we
may qualitatively alter the conditions of our lives. It seems,
however, that both of the above
arguments have failed to take
account of the existent conditions. Little wonder, then, that
of the “interested” students, few
follow the leadership. To where?
New Harmony or Brook Farm?
Unless we recognize the exigencies of the objective conditions,
we shall continue to wax dreamy.
What is needed is an “objective
analysis of objective conditions.”
Without such an analysis preceding the formulation of programs,
the “establishment” will continue
to laugh at our innocence, while
not slowing one whit the exploitation of us all, the building
of bigger bombs, and the reaping of the rewards of their programmed students.

IBM 360/67 Time-Saving Computer System
To Free University from 'Mechanical Learning'
By ELLEN CARDONE
Computing Centers will “before very long be as important
as libraries” in the research work
of universities, according to Dr.
Anthony Ralston, Director of the
SUNYAB Computing Center.

“This is very close to being
true now in graduate education,”
Dr. Ralston added. He speculated
that before long all undergraduates at SUNYAB would be expected to take some course work
in the computer field.
While many
need advanced
pare for their
should get out

students

would

courses to precareers, “no one
of college without some knowledge of these
machines and how they will be affecting society,” he said.

Looking forward to the use of
“computer-assisted
instruction,”
Dr. Ralston is of the opinion that
the use of machines in teaching

would “offer chances for students to have much more meaningful contact with instructors.”
Teachers would be freed from
the “mechanical” aspects of learning, which would save time for
“real intellectual contact.”

The use of computers in the
sciences and engineering is familiar to everyone, but Dr. Ralston explained that they have
many applications in the social
sciences and humanities as well.
The center sponsors assistantships
to permit graduate students in
other departments of the University to explore the potential
of computers in their own fields.
For example, census data patterns
in history, concordances in poetry
and dialect patterns in linguistics can be compiled much less
laboriously than former methods
allowed. The arts are represented

by such innovations as computer“composed” electronic music.

The SUNYAB computing center, largest in the State University system, will greatly increase
its capacity next summer by the
installation of an IBM 360/67 re-

time-sharing computer, which will replace the
present 7044 system.
mote-access

Dr. Ralston’s annual report to
President Furnas states, “Besides
providing 6 to 8 times the computing power of the 7044 system, the 360/67 will enable a
much higher quality of computer
service because of the remote access (about 30 typewriter consoles will be installed initially
around the University), time-sharing features.” “Time-sharing,” Dr.
Ralston explained, refers to the
ability of this computer to shift
rapidly from one job to another.
The new computer will be installed on the interim campus
site but will be operated by
units installed on this campus,
linked to it through telephone
lines.
When the new campus is occupied, it is expected that re-

very much like a typewriter, he
types out instructions that are

relayed directly to the computer,
which might be several miles
away. Almost immediately, the
computer sends back a ‘reply.’

“If the reply is sufficient, the
researcher has his answer, and
that’s all there is to it. If not,
the computer and the researcher
can carry out a ‘conversation’ in
computer language via the typewriter terminal until the necessary information is in the researcher’s hands.”
The present Computing Center,
located in Goodyear Hall, employs about 25 full-time staff and
an an equal number of student
assistants. The 10-year plan allows for a staff of 100 by the
mid-70’s to handle a computing
load 100 times greater than the
present

one.

As part of its educational function, the computing center offers
short, non-credit courses in standard programming systems, such
as FORTRAN, and in special systems applications.

mote-access units will be installed
in more than 200 locations. A
recent release described how a
student or teacher might benefit
from this “desk-side” convenience.

Further information for courses
this summer and next fall can
be obtained from the Center, Ext.

"Faced with a problem that
might take him hours or even
days to solve with a slide rule
or desk calculator, he decides instead to use the computer. To
do so, all he has to do is go
to his office, or a room in his
residence hall, where a remote
terminal, which is connected to

In addition to serving the University’s research needs, the Computing Center lends its facilities
to other units of the State University, neighboring private colleges, high schools, and research

the computer itself, is located.
'There, at a device that looks

4015.

foundations.

Private

industries

approximately 1% of the
Center’s computing time on a
paying basis.
use

�Friday, July

22. 1966

SPECTRUM

PAM PIVI

A Review: John Bdrth Prose Reading
(reviewed by JJV. LaRue)

It has been said, “a myth in
the light of reevaluation is often
destroyed.” This certainly does
not hold true for creations from
John Barth’s mythopoeic mind.
A week from Wednesday last
John Barth, novelist and Professor of English, regaled an eager
audience with an eminently successful “in-joke”—a reading from
his latest work, Giles Goatboy.
Mac Hammond, the English De-

partment’s summer toastmaster,
introduced Barth as the foremost
cdmic writer of today. This epithet, hyperbolic as it may seem,

is, in fact, well-deserved, if
Barth’s newest novel matches the
comic quality of his third book,
The Sot-Weed Factor. The formidable selection which was presented at the reading would seem
to indicate that this may well be
the case.
At the outset Professor Barth
explained that he would not really be reading prose as advertised,
but rather would read his some-

times-verse rendition of the
famed Oedipus myth. This was,
in short, his modern comic version of Sophocles’ revered Oedipus Tyrannus (“Swellfoot the Tyrant”). Barth stressed that the
comic overtones of this famous
“mystery-thriller” play had
caught his fancy. He asked the
same question which has plagued
teachers and critics throughout
the ages; how could old swellfoot
be such a boob as not to realize
his own incestuous situation?
And what better parallel could
there be for this self-righteous
boob than a mythical modern-day
university president?

The commencement of the play:
let us say that the scene is set
at Multiversity, Anywhere, U.S.A.
As the lights rise, enter a slightly
limping man with a tortured look
on his false face. Thus begins
Barth’s parody and penetrating
analysis of the seemingly stilted

conventions of ancient Greek
tragedy. His reading was, on one
level, a satire of that tragic genre
which has perplexed and yet beguiled both scholars and students
from Sophocles’ day to our own.
In justification of this apparently irreverent treatment of a
“classic,” Barth explained (incorrectly, I believe) that the words
“tragedy” and “satire” have a
similar background, viz., something to do with goats (or is it
old goats?). Hence the obscure
and recondite connection with
Giles Goatboy. But this is no matter; a poet’s reasons are sufficient
unto themselves.

on nothing but Mickey Mouse
courses under Taliped.
Be that as it may, ol* Pres, is
having a helluva time handling
the present campus disturbances.

ima of Greek tragedy. The chorus
is composed of steadfast university committeemen who sing odes
of praise to their great president.
While commenting sardonically
on committeemen everywhere,
Barth has also managed a sidesplitting parody of tragic choral
style. His chorus moves back and
forth in intricate patterns, clapping hands and rhythmically singing strophes and antistrophes of

He is forced to call back from
retirement old Prof.-Prof, the
Prophet for advisement. This eminent emeritus is none other than
Gynander, the blind old faggot
(alias Tiresias, the seer, in Sophocles’ tamer version). Gynander, as
most faggots, becomes a bit
bitchy and riles Taliped by telling him that he ain’t no good for
the old U. Perhaps he ought to
resign, for he, the great pres.pres, himself ,is responsible for
all the current fug-ups. This
blight is upon them because Taliped has had the bad taste to
knock off his daddy and knock
up his mommy (albeit unwittingly). The gods being duly apprised
of which circumstances have seen
fit to send a pox upon Cadmusville.
Agenora (who substitutes for
Jocasta, perhaps with a pun on
“age”?) is Taliped’s lascivious old
mother-wife. Barth turns her
into something of a wanton who
has been shacking up with various and sundry committee members on campus. Nevertheless,
from the first her maternal instincts are apparent. She even
forces her little lambkins, the
otherwise stalwart Taliped, to
coo, “I wuv oo.”

The would-be hero of this piece
of bravura is Taliped Decantus.
Our hero, university president,
daddy-killer and mother-humper,
has belatedly called a meeting of
the Task Force in response to
serious campus disturbances. It
seems that this flunking university, where Taliped holds sway in
all his rigid grandeur, has been
hit by a veritable plague of abortions, student-rioting, and facultyphilandering. Despite his penchant for sleuthing (or is it snooping?), Pres. Taliped is unable to
solve the mystery of this sudden
disaffection and unsavory conduct. Sophoclean irony could not
have been better portrayed; Taliped is perplexed; he, the great
Taliped, who in olden times (nine
years ago to be exact) came runAnd so the story continues
ning up from Isthmus College along its well-trodden path until
(track star that he was) and disthe peripetal, anagnoristic climax
posed of Cadmus College’s loathof Taliped’s horrible self-blinding
some monster Sphinx by cooly takes place. The once-great ruler,
answering her ridiculously easy parricide and matriphile, retires
riddle; “Who is the Mom who
gloomily muttering something
eats her kids?” (N.B. the ever- about mystical resurrection and
goat
present
motif again, kiddies). further duties or some such rot.
“Elementary,” replied Taliped, In reality, he is constrained to
“It’s Mother Campus, dear old take a long journey around the
Alma Matar." The monstrous exworld, while the chorus of comaminer, who was wont to get mitteemen and ad-man-simps gibsevere gastric acidity when she ber on about the untoward desreceived correct answers, dropped tiny of man.
dead on the spot. The implication
Most notable about Barth’s
seems to be that the era of difwork is the fact that his knife
ficult exams was past; from now cuts in so many directions at the
same time. Besides the attack on
academic inbreeding (in the truest sense of the word), near the
end of the reading the audience
was treated to a devastating parody of all the muddled terms
with which students of Greek
tragedy are weighted down. Other
highlights were Barth's satiric
comments on the too-timely arrivals of characters on the Greek
stage!
“Here

my brother-in-law
right on
addition, there was his

comes

by sheer coincidence

cue.” In

turning of the ever-present messenger into a modern mailman
(or rather male-man, Big Stingaree type), who is given permission by Agenore to deposit his
male in her box at any time.
Interspersed among the episodes are the familiar choral stas-

doggerel

verse.

In this reading one particular
segment of our society was brilliantly caricatured. As might be
expected in a reading which lasted over one hour, however, there
was some unevenness. At times
the tempo slackened and the
puns fell a bit heavy, despite the
humorous sparkle of many of
the parts. Some in the audience
felt, quite frankly, that the whole
thing was a bit much. Whatever
happened to auraa mediocritat?
These few lags were paradoxically attributable to the same quality which produces that Barthian
comic brilliance, namely, his epic
logodaedaly which sometimes
turns into a banal logorrhea. But
this is a mere quibble; even good

Homer nods occasionally. Indeed,
Barth's linguistic abilities are not
inconsiderable; be often betrays
an almost Joycean richness of
language. And one might compare his longer catalogues to
those of the German novelist
Gunther Grass. Suffice it to say
that he kept his audience in
stitches for a good deal of the
time.
As 1 have pointed out above,
Barth, in addition to poking fun
at campus politics and ineptitudes. also possesses a keen analytical sense for things literary.
Not since A. E. Houseman's infamous "Fragment of a Greek
Tragedy’" have the peculiar foibles of Greek dramaturgy been
laid so bare. And not since Baiso
Snell entered the posterior opening of the alimentary canal of
the Trojan Horse have we been
given a better comic treatment of
Greek myth. To be sure, Barth
possesses the same admirable
ability as did Nathanael West to
see through the cant of American
life. One hopes that he will not
confine himself to academic personalities, who surely must be
straw men for such a ready wit.

UB to Conduct SUNY Graduate
Program in Elmira-Coming Area
The State University of New
York board of trustees has approved a graduate program for
the Corning-Elmira area which
will be conducted by the Division of Interdisciplinary Studies
and Research at the State University at Buffalo.
The program, leading to the
master of science degree with a
major

in

engineering

science,

of the great service
which the University provides
for the State. It also gives us
example

a great opportunity to exchange
knowledge with an important
segment of our scientific and
technical population.”

Dr. Irving H. Shames, chairman
of the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies and Research,
said, “We are looking forward
to the mutual benefits which
this program will provide, not
only in the furthering of education, but in the broadening and
stimulation of our faculty.”

will be directed by Professor
John Medige of State University
at Buffalo.
Courses will be offered through
the Corning Center of the College Center of the Finger Lakes.
The curriculum will stress “a
thorough treatment” of the fundaAdmissions and registration
mentals of science and their apwill be in accordance with the
plications to significant engineerpolicies of the State University
ing problems, according to Proof New York at Buffalo. Infessor Medige. General areas of quiries may be directed to Prothe courses will include analysis, fessor Medige. at either Buffalo
materials science, continuum or Corning.
mechanics and systems.
Courses beginning in September will include Theoretical EnThe program, which is in substance identical to an existing gineering Analysis I, which deveprogram at the University, will lops mathematical tools and techbe taught by regular faculty
niques useful for advanced en
members of the Division. Classes gineering courses, and Continuum
will be held in Houghton House, Mechanics I, which treats solid
11 West Third Street, Corning. and fluid media from a general
Students will also spend at least standpoint. Offerings will be
initially at the rate of two per
six weeks in full time residence
semester.
at Buffalo. Counseling and advisement will be provided by
the Buffalo faculty.
FOR SALE
Dean E. Arthur Trabant, dean
at
1959 Volvo for $350. Call 831
of the School of Engineering
Buffalo, said: “This is another
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�Editorial! (Comment

In this week’s Spectrum, Jim Hanson
attacks the conception of University “autonomy.” The incident provoking his attack
seems to be the phrase from a previous editorial, “that as the university becomes increasingly involved with society, its complicity in society’s evils increases proportionately.” Lest the Spectrum be autonomy-baited
(which, in the face of the admittedly unclear
statement above appears to be justified),
the following should serve as a clarified
statement of position.
The traditional conflict between the
university and society has been transformed,
according to Clark Kerr in his The Uses of
the University, into a functional immersion
of the university in every aspect of social
life in such a manner that the university
has become “the focal point of national
growth.” The catalyst of the transformation
has been:
the widespread recognition that new
knowledge is the most important factor
in economic and social growth. We are
just now perceiving that the university’s
invisible product, knowledge, may be
the most powerful single element in our
culture .
The Kerrian conception of reality seems to
be gaining the ascendency, in practice if
not in theory, in higher education today.
The conception of the university’s function in society as the producer of knowledge
necessitates certain structural techniques
which come to resemble industrial organization. The university, in a sense, becomes
microcosmic of the greater social order. But
strictly it cannot be called microcosmic because it has become part and parcel of
society. To produce and then sell knowledge
involves innumerable middle-men and involvement with public and private agencies.
Implicit in much of these dealings is an acceptance of the social values and institutions
which the university formerly criticized from
its position of detachment.
So far the university has played a passive role in its immersion in society, allowing its facilities and minds to be used for
such enterprises as national defense. “The
university,” say Kerr, “has become a prime
instrument of national purpose. This is new.
.

.

oCetterA

to

.

.

THE PEOPLE

.

This is the essence of the transformation
engulfing our universities.”
Kerr’s acquiescence to the use of the
university as “an instrument of national purpose” places the university in a position of
social responsibility to which it has
to been unaccustomed. To hear Prof. Scigliano appraise the M.S.U. Viet Nam Project
with the proper “value-free inquiry” after
the fact of valued action only indicates how
ill-at-ease the university finds itself in its
new role as a prime instrument.
Why, if the need for new knowledge
has catalyzed the transformation of the university into this prime instrument of national
purpose has the university been so reticent
in controlling the use to which its knowledge
is put in the face of the obvious need for
a radically different social orientation? The
university, if it is as powerful as Kerr seems
to indicate, should be forming a creative
national purpose rather than allowing itself
to be a mere instrument in the amoral business of politics.
The answer lies partly with the conception of education as the production of knowledge. When knowledge becomes a product,
the responsibility for its use can be relegated
to the consumer. Another answer may be
the unaccustomed power which the univernow finds its possible to wield.
If Kerr has accurately described the
university’s social pre-eminence, the consideration of knowledge as a saleable product
represents an evasion of responsibility. The
university could, if its power has not been
over-estimated, lead a society bereft of
imaginative social thinking. In short, the university could use its power to assure a creative national purpose.
The crisis facing the modern university
may well be one of nerve. So far, few universities have had the audacity to suggest
that they should wield an influence commensurate with their power. Perhaps the university has already become too involved in
corporate liberalism to effect meaningful social change. Yet somehow the university
seems most likely of any sector of our society to supply imaginative leadership and
programs.

the Editor

EDITOR;
Dear People mister Jones still

doesn't know what’s happening
and it should be noted that Gardiner also hadn’t done acid before
the writing of his article which
appeared in last week's Spectrum.
Talk demands experience and in
the realm of psychedelia such experience cannot be grounded on
just more talk. One who has
never done acid can neither talk
nor judge: the case being here
that seeing is not believing. If
you do not want to know what’s
up do it yourself.
The ‘free self-activity’ Mr. Gardiner suggests, circumlocutizes,
and adumbrates with psychophilosophical theory is, as anyone
who has had a psychedelic experience knows, just another egogame
its only advantage being
that it offers further opportunities for self-congratulation, and
thus further ego-defense. Most
children, though ‘beautiful’ and
‘free’ are very selfish, and freaking on acid, while also ‘beautiful’
and Tree,’ is not likely to be social
or altruistic. There is a difference
between consciousness (not ‘the
accumulation of experience’
in your lifetime anyway) and
realization determined by what
we have learned from which
most of our activity stems. Knowledge (we do know what we are
—

—

Learning

(being

are doing) is the

battle we’re stuck in now, though
once there was no difference.
Do you really know what a mess
you’re involved in and still con-

to? We’ve shot
selves out of our own humanity
witness MAN COMMITS SUICIDE,
G1RL ARRESTED FOR BARE
BREASTS ON BEACH and just
about anything else you can read
in the paper or hear on the
street. The only way out (’Turn
on—Tune in—Drop out’) is in.
And psychiatrists ain’t where its
at. Acid is, and, unfortunately
tributing

our-

so or not (a drugl) we NEED
it if we are to live as how we
were created and not as how
we think we created ourselves,
The myths are true, the rationale
is not. So a complete turnover

is needed and it will be only as
drastic as your shape now SO
turn around freak out flip out
with no fear for you are the
unspeakable word of the holy,
Thou, love, are god—be glad,
and unafraid—do not live with
the lie that you are better than
Zeus, or Dionysus. And read Wm.
Blake, who has not a hero. If
you’re satisfied with your world
as it is personal look up and
don’t be or else youil never live,
Read Jesus too, he was higher
than kites being right down to
earth with no strings attached.
And if you don’t want to hear
the president or the police or
the FDA because THEYRE the
crazy ones and they don’t know
and how they got all that power
and those jails is just the mistake of past generations. As always
FINDOUTFORYOURSELF
find OUT. LSD can do you nothing but good. If you get messed
up just know you deserved it.

By FRANK KLINGER

I suppose that everyone has
their conception of an ideal University. For many it would probably include no exams or marks.
An immediate criticism is of
course that nobody will learn anything. There are some, however,
who believe that right now there
are many students who are not
learning too much.
When I was a freshman, I took
Biology 101. It was an excellent
course given by several brilliant
lecturers—all specialists in their
fields. I should have learned a
great deal, but I was so busy
madly taking notes for the exam
that all the essential concepts

escaped me.
True, if I were brighter, I
have absorbed more, but
begging the question. The
age student majoring in

might

that’s
aver-

social
sciences attends his 3 lectures
per subject a week (when he
doesn’t cut, that is), pulls his
all-nighters for tests, crams isolated facts from Monarch Review
Notes, and gets his 1.0. But does
he really get the one type of
education we were led to expect!
My conception of an ideal University is as follows: no tests or
compulsory homework. The student’s grade would be based
purely on class attendance and
behavior. Each lecturer would
post the times of his classes and
each day the student could
choose
to attend whichever
classes interest him. (If a class
overfills, the last to arrive can
stand.)
The student would .be allowed
to bring only such material pertaining to his course as assigned
by the professor. Talking and
other disturbances would be
strictly “verboten”.
Since the average student taking 15 hours a week spends no
more than an additional IS hours
studying, I would require him
to attend 30 hours a week. Note
also that the teachers would be
able to say a lot more if the students didn’t have to scribble
their every word down on paper.
Should a student still be of the
opinion (which I am not) that
he can learn more from the
texts than from his professors, he

could read the book during class
or better still, outside the class
to supplement the professor.
Nor do I believe that the factcramming which would be eliminated is essential to understanding. On the contrary, an understanding which stems from genuine interest should result in a

more comprehensive knowledge
of the essential facts about a
given subject. A person who is
interested in politics, for example, is far more likely to have
a greater knowledge of international events than one who is
simply forced (high school style)
to memorize the names and posi-

tions of the world leaders. What
about the person who just isn’t
interested in the courses he
chooses so much so that he would
rather sit and daydream through
the class he picked to go to than
try to understand the material?
I maintain that forcing this individual to memorize a few facts
so that he can stay in school is
not giving him a real education
either.
What about the engineering or
medical student? Society expects
reasonable assurances that they
will be capable, so we might give
them tests every few months, or
else exempt them from the system entirely. This system is designed primarily to make the
education of the non-specialized
liberal arts major a bit more
meaningful so that the student
in a course such as pyschology
would do more studying of insights concerning human behavior and less memorizing the
bones in the head.
This is simply an idea, one
which probably has great many
faults that I’m too dense to perceive. I do not intend to lead
a sit-in at Hayes if my plan is
not adopted by next week or
next year or even next century. If
this article can simply stimulate
some constructive criticism and
rational discussion of the issues
raised, its purpose will be fulfilled.
Those of you who are sick of
my writing will be happy to
know that next week this column
will be written by someone else.

Environmental Product

Mr. Jones Is Still in Dark
TO THE

doing) versus
told what we

Friday, July 22, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

There

is

brain

damage

overdose and no
(witness Leary’s
ability to play those crazy investigation games better than the
investigators ever after 300 plus
trips). Study animals, stones, and
plants because they are more
than us now and not what we
make of them. The point is, your
brain is already damaged. The
ever proliferating and meaningless symbol patterns of a ‘progressing’ culture means mutation
in the chemical patterns of the
brain. Like, you don’t even have
the possibility of thinking like a
nineteenth century man at that
being before he was
level
more turned on
but you can
communicate with any man or
beast or plant if you only get
down to the essentials which is
only life period. That God be
dead or no is totally irrelevant
because that is a word in among
words and the chemical patterns
and processes in the dance of
life have only motion. Woops,
we polluted Lake Erie. And that
happened because we picked
flowers and do not know the
animals and plants we eat.
This drug can do anything for
you if you will be what you are
so take it and make it and plead
the first if they get you.
P S.—to already heads there are
8 at least student police informers on campus NOW and probably more later from Goddard’s
training for infiltration center,
Put it in their coke or plead irrelevance them,
Yours on earth a love
no

—

—

TO THE EDITOR:
David Gardiner, who advocates
wild use of LSD as an “alterna-

of untold amounts of U.S. foreign
aid, is known to be among the
world’s heroin kingpins. Further-

life, is a product of his environ-

cannot escape connection with
the most enormous international
banks to finance its enterprises.

ment.

Is it any wonder that the same
environment which bombs defenseless villagers with napalm
will also provide money to finance a university newspaper
whose policy-makers furnish two
whole pages out of eight to promoting and rationalizing the use
of this deadly drug?
It really is not surprizing, considering that under this system,
illegal narcotics is actually one
of the “free enterprises” whose
volume has been variously estimated as high as $5 billion per
year. The Shah of Iran, recipient

And, come to think of it, where
does the money to pay for the
Spectrum, and for that matter,
SUNYAB itself, come from? Are
their financial sources unaware
of the possible deadly consequences to naive readers of such an

article?

Or, perhaps, from their point
of view, LSD is a much more
agreeable “alternative” to modern
realities, than one that would deprive the big firms of their billionaire assets and profits.
Joel Myers

Sever Trivia Donates
Romanian Collection
A substantial collection of Romanian books, periodicals and recordings have recently been donated to the University by Dr.
Sever Trifu, who has returned
to his native Romania after teaching Romanian language and literature during the Spring semester
in the Dept of Modern Languages. The collection, previously
housed in Crosby Hall, has been
moved to Lockwood Library
where it is in the process of
being catalogued for student use.
Included in this recent acquisition are Romanian literary clas-

sics, art books, modern literature, history and geography, popular magazines of the country
and a collection of records, many
of which are recordings of drama
and poetry. The library wishes
to express its gratitude to Dr.
Trifu for this generous donation.
The collection will soon be available to the student body upon

request.

Dr. Trifu will return to the
U.S. this fall to teach Romanian
studies in a thus far undesignated
American university.

�Friday, July 22, 1966

-

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

JAZZ IMPRESSIONS

Kenny Burrell, who has been
called by Downbeat Magazine
‘the most recorded guitarist in
jazz today’, recently concluded
a highly successful week at Buffalo’s Royal Arms Show Bar. We
had an opportunity to talk to
the man who for the last decade
has ranked among the top jazz
guitarists and to ask him a few
questions.
After listening to Mr. Burrell
play for two evenings, during

which be showed many sides of
his talent as a jazz guitarist on
works such as “The Shadow of
Your Smile” and “Billy Boy”
and semi-classical on “Greensleeves” and “Moonlit Sand” (which is
a cut from his latest Verve LP
“Guitar Forms”) we concluded
that if this man’s thoughts and
feelings were as widespread as
his talents, we were in for a very
interesting interview.
Burrell, who will be 35 soon

but who appears much younger,
spoke very quietly about his
music and feelings.
“My major guitar influences
were Charlie Christian, Oscar
Moore, and Django Reinhardt.”
Charlie Christian was perhaps
the leading exponent of the jazzguitar during the be-bop era,
and more or less led the advancement of the guitar in jazz.
Oscar Moore was the brilliant
guitarist with the old Nat ‘King’
Cole Trip, and Django Reinhardt
is considered to be a ‘genius of
the modern guitar’.
We asked Mr. Burrell about
the name given him, and whether
he preferred playing with his
own group (Richard Wyands,
piano; Martin Rivera, bass; and
Oliver Jackson, drums) or with
other men such as Jimmy Smith,
John Coltrane, or any of the
countless others he has recorded
with, and whether he thought the
guitar had more value in jazz
as a solo force or as a rhythm
instrument.
“The guitar is very important
both ways in today’s music, both
as a solo force and rhythm instrument; I enjoy playing both
on my own and with others, as
long as I’m playing. Studio work
strengthens your technique

.

.

.

but it’s not as satisfying to me

as having my own group. When
you are working with a group
which has a lot of latitude and
freedom of expression there’s
no limit to what you can do. I
try to use material that I enjoy
and that the men in the group
will enjoy playing. I’m not concerned with trying to keep up
with the hit parade—I’ve found
that when you really enjoy what
you’re doing, the people will
enjoy it, too.”
We then asked Mr. Burrell
what he thought was responsible
for the decline of the ‘jazz club’
and what, if any thing could

save them.

“The most important thing in
a jazz club is the presentation,
and not only in a musical sense.
The responsibility of presentation
falls on both the musician involved and the club owner. Little
details are important, such as the
lighting, acoustics, microphones,
etc. For example, Ahmad Jamal
is coming next week and (owner)
Lou Galanter has bought a new
piano for him. Moves like this
are important and naturally the
performer will respond.”
As a musician who is exposed
to both clubs and concerts, how
does Burrell feel about the two
different musical settings?
“Some people don’t come to
clubs to listen 100%; they are
there for social as well as musical reasons. There’s nothing
wrong with it, except that it
doesn’t give you the same kind
of attention you get in a concert
hall. A musician is freer to do
more of what he wishes when an
audience is there to listen to
him.”
“I like the Royal Arms though,
the atmosphere promotes listening and the patrons are very attentive.”
Burrell played to a very good
crowd each night of his stand
and we have never heard a more
attentive crowd at the Arms.
Our next series of questions
concerned jazz trends. If Stan
Kenton was recognized as the
“jazz voice” of the 40’s and likewise Miles Davis in the 50’s, who,
if anyone, would you consider
the “jazz voice” of the present
or near future?

“I don’t feel that there is any
such person, I feel that jazz is
going in many directions and not
following any one trend. Therefore there is no strong, noticeable movement. ‘Avant garde’ has
not taken over as did be-bop,
which is good, because the concept of jazz “schools" has been
very misleading for the public.
For example, many modern jazz
fans think Art Tatum’s playing
is associated with the time of
Bach, but seriously, Art Tatum
did things 25 years ago that many
jazz musicians are trying to do
today. Jazz is more an individual
matter than to be categorized
with any one style or ‘school’.”
What do you think of the ‘commercial’ attempts of jazz musicians? Will this help bridge the
gap between jazz and the general
public or will it cheapen jazz?
(We were joined, at this point
by Carroll Hardy, voice of radio
station WEBR’s Jazz Central, Saturday from 11:15 p.m.-l:00 a.m.
and Jazz on a Sunday Evening,
9:30-11:00 p.m.)
Burrell continued, “We are all
in the music business and are
looking for a saleable item. Some
musicians stretch the point to
extremes.”
We mentioned specifically Ramsey Lewis’ “Hang on Sloopy” and
agreed that the end product of
this attempt was the increased
desirability of a salable item.
Hardy stated, “Some ‘commercial’ attempts are easy to analyze,
others are not. “But Not For Me”
by Ahmad Jamal may be considered ‘commercial’ by some, not
so by others, but musicians do
not have the same thing in mind.
Once a jazz musician becomes
‘commercially’ successful he gets
put down by others (critics, etc.”)
We then asked Burrell, if he
had ever considered recording
a ‘commercial’ album with the
sale of records as the main thing
in mind.
“No, I wouldn’t even consider
it, because I like to keep a balance between what I have to do
and what I like to do. I always
want to like what I do. Then
again, as Carroll said, what is
‘commercial’ to one person may
not be so to another because

Plays By Paul Carter Harrison
Will Preview in Baird Hall

people see things different ways.
If there was a popular number

that I liked, I would record it. I

may record “The Shadow of Your
Smile”. As far as show albums,

well, if I dug the music I'd record it. I couldn’t and wouldn’t
emulate someone else’s style. This
is not necessary to communicate.
If you enjoy what you’re doing in
most cases you’ll communicate."
About the communication of

jazz on the whole, Burrell had
this to say. “Jazz is growing in

many directions: movies, T.V.,
rock and roll, and even classical
music. This cant help but to affect the music scene because
every medium is in relation. The
music goes ‘round and 'round but
the ‘word’ stands still; the music
is getting an enormous amount
of play but the ‘word’ is not
being spread. In other words, people listen to jazz but don’t realize
it (T.V., movies, etc.). Then they’ll
pass a club or concert and pass
it by because they don’t think
they’ll dig it. They don’t know
it’s the same as they’ve just
heard.”
“The ‘word’ is not identified
correctly, and it all comes down
to ‘what is jazz?’ Jazz is relative
to the individual but basically,
jazz is improvisation, whether it's

-

with Frank Sinatra. Peggy Lee
or Kenny Burrell. It’s basically
still there, although the public
may not realize it. When the jazz
identification is omitted in connection with the image of big
name performers who are really
jazz performers, it doesn't hurt
the performer, but it hurts the
growth of the concept, ‘the word’,
and also the chances for less
well known performers to get
a hearing from the part of the
audience that supports their
famous artists.”
We closed by agreeing that the
blame doesn't lie only with the
aforementioned cause, but with
many other sources, too numerous
to go into now.
Kenny Burrell will be back in
this area the first two weeks in
August, appearing at Toronto’s
Town Tavern. Meanwhile, the
Royal Arms, in keeping with its
policy of bringing to Buffalo the
finest names in jazz, announces
this schedule:

Ahmad Jamal—July 4-10
Jimmy McGriff—July 11-17
Dizzy Gillespie Quintet—July
18-24 (featuring James Moody)
Jon Hendricks—July 25-31
Wes Montgomery—August 1-7

-

Two new plays by Paul CarterHarrison will have their American premieres on Friday, July 29,
at Baird Hall. The two one-act
preductions, “Pavane for a DeadPan Minstrel,’ and “Top Hat,” will
be directed by Mr. Carter-Harrison, who is artist-in-residence at
U.B. this summer.
A graduate of Indiana University, with an M.A. in psychology
from the New School for Social
Research (N.Y.), the Americanborn Carter-Harrison currently
makes his home in Amsterdam,
Holland. He has published widely

in Holland and Germany and produced several documentary films
for Dutch Television.
When questioned about his productions, the young playwright
made this comment, “The plays
project clearly a European influence in direction and style, yet
the reference in subject matter
is undeniably American and
thereby controversial.
"Pavan* is an examination of
what happens when two friends
—one Negro, the other Caucasian—exchange each other's identity when competing for a valued
object: woman.

“Top Hat looks at another
problem in our society;
the
clash between social animals, represented by a ‘free’ tramp, and
on the other side by a wealthy
woman of the ‘establishment.’
The tramp’s untimely absorption
—

into the establishment ends in
his destruction.”
Both plays will be performed
nightly during the weekends of
July 29-31 and August 5-7. Curtain time is 8;30 p.m. Tickets for
all performances are available
from Norton Hall Box Office,
831-3704.

Youth Discussion Group Provides
Summer Seminar in Marxist Theory

summer months.
Youth Discussion Group is conDuring the

ducting a class which gives a
Marxist analysis of comparative
socialist theory and practice. The
class will be developed around

the Marxist classics. It will be
held at at the Youth Discussion
Group office, 11 Minnesota Ave.
—just around the corner from
Main Street. Classes will meet
every Thursday evening starting
at 7:00 p.m.

Gerald Gross, spokesman for
YDG, described the nature of
the class as follows;
“The aims of our class are to
give young people an opportunity to make a serious study of
Marxism in order to rid themselves of the many half-baked
notions and distortions of scientific socialism picked up from
university professors and other
petty-bourgeois socialists, as well
as from frank supporters of the
status quo. The class will be definitely partisan to socialism and

"Den Quixote end the Watermill" by Philip Iveryeed will be part
of art axhibit

will aim at inspiring youths to
that outlook's lofty ideals, and
a militant support for the revolutionary anti-imperialist struggles of the oppressed everywhere.”
'The class will not be purely intellectual in nature. Marxism is
a tool to change reality through
practice, not merely to “understand” it through “pure” theory;
there is no true theory not dependent on practice, and without
true

theory, practice

from reality.”

diverges

Figure-International Featured
In Norton Starting July 20
The Figure-International, an exhibition of contemporary painting, including such well-known
artists as Appel, de Kooning,
Diebenkorn and Porter, under the
sponsorship of the New York
State Council on the Arts will
open at Norton Union from July
20 through August 3. Mr. Dennis
Adrian, former Director of the
Allan Frumkin Gallery in New
York City, selected the exhibition which will circulate throughout the State of New York under
the auspices of The American
Federation of Arts.
Mr. Adrian, in the text which
he has written to accompany the
exhibition, says “Figure painting
since the Second World War presents a panorama of varied ac-

tivity in which several main lines
of development are discernible.
These currents have one great

common feature: the assimilation

of previous artistic traditions
ranging over wide areas of history. The assimilation, or more
properly, creative synthesis, has
tended to take place In the frame-

work of very basic visual approaches: first, the insistence of
maintaining the picture plane
unbroken, resulting in the dominance of two dimensional form.”
Ben Johnson's "Long-Haired Girl”
and Marcia Marcus’ “The Young
Mathematician" are representative of the tradition of emphasis
on two dimensional forms. Mr.

Adrian continues with the second
grouping, “The opening of the
picture plane into an ‘apparent
space' that seems an extension of
the observers own space.” Such
artists as Lennart Anderson's
"Boy, “D” Series” and Leland
Bell's self-portraits are in this
manner. The third grouping is
“the primary of fantasy and invention, where a great variety of
visual schema are employed to
bring forth from the mind of
the artist images of great psychic
power, sweeping away inconsistencies of pictorial structure with
almost magical force. Typical of
this approach is Maryan's “Personage” and Dubuffet’s M Cbocolat”.

�Friday,, July 22, 19M

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Student Role in California Grape Strike
(CPS) —Around 100 students arrived in the small town of Del
Rey, Calif., on June 19, coming by
thumb from Toronto and New
York City, by car from Washington and Oregon, by bus and train
from the Midwest and California
itself, by plane from Washington,
D.C. and Texas. They came to
work for the National Farm
Workers Association in its sum-

mer project.
After a week of learning, discussing, picketting on the grape
fields, and leafletting, most left
to "scrounge up” support in the
rest of the country for the grape
strike and boycott the products
of the DiGiorgio firm, which has
held out against their demands

“to make the life of the farm
worker liveable.”
Some stayed in Delano to do
research and help with legal and
medical services which the National Farm Workers Association
(NFWA) offers farm workers.
The NFWA began about three
years ago when its director, Cesar Chavez, then an organizer for
the Community Services Organization of California, decided to
work more directly with California farm workers. Chavez chose
an area he knew well in which
the rich San Joaquin
to1&gt;egin
—

Valley.
Approximately 3,000 families
are now dues-paying ($3.50 per
year) members of the Association,
which during its first two years
has helped farm workers to see
what they could do to help themselves and developed a farm

worker’s credit union and insurance program. Now in the final
planning stages is a farm workers’
cooperative, with stores, clinics,
and legal and accounting services.
Intensive work on the coop was
halted when the NFWA members
voted in mid-September 1965 to
join the strike called by the Agricultural Workers Organizing
Committee (AWOC), ALF-CIO, a
union of primarily Filipino farm
workers who were working in
the area's grape fields.
After 9 months, during which
pickets were arrested and growers refused to meet with union
representatives of the strikers,
Schenley Industries, owner of the
second largest farm in the area,
negotiated a contract for better
wages and working conditions
with the NFWA. The contract
eliminates labor contractors, who
traditionally negotiated with the
grower to supply laborers and
often used their power as middlemen to the disadvantage of the
workers.
A potent weapon in bringing
Schenley to negotiate was the
NFWA-initiated consumer boycott of its products. Students
throughout the country, and especially in California, manned the
picket lines for the boycott. The
same weapon is now being used
to try the largest grower in the
Valley, the DiGiorgio Corporation,
which has broken five previous
farm worker strikes, to the negotiating table.
The students' primary job for

the Association this summer is

to raise support for the boycott

FINE FOOD

&amp;

DRINK

GROTTO BAR
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

Old Post Road

Inn

Main at Highgata

the owners’ “unchristian souls”

at the shrine to the Virgin of
Guadeloupe which the strikers

Rose.

The students attending the
orientation week heard this history of the strike for two days,
then went from Del Rey to Delano on June 20 for the remaining
orientation sessions. They went
with the strikers to the grape
fields, where they picketed the
“scab” workers and shouted to
them the issues of the strike.
Before work started each morning, they handed copies of a short
daily paper, El Mosquito Zumbador, to workers leaving the
labor camps and arriving in DiGiorgio’s fields. El Mosquito told
of the Association’s obtaining the
Schenley contract and of the
need for workers to refuse to
vote in the DiGiorgio-sponsored
elections to be held Friday on
company property and checked
by a private accounting firm.
DiGiorgio called for free elections suddenly and unilaterally.
Just as suddenly, the Teamsters’
Union name appeared on the ballot. DiGiorgio and the NFWA
had been negotiating about elections previously and could not
come to terms because of some
of the conditions DiGiorgio insisted upon, including a ban of
strikes during harvests, and refusal to allow the strikers to
vote.
Since agreement on these con-

ditions had not been reached and
since elections were unilaterally
called and unilaterally judged,
NFWA and AWOC secured restraining orders from the courts
which forbade DiGiorgio to put
their names on the ballot. Then
they began to persuade workers

not to vote.

The orientation week schedule

was hastily reshuffled

to meet

emergency. Students spent
Thursday afternoon and evening
leafletting farm workers and
Mexican-American neighborhoods
in Delano and nearby communities. They asked residents to
the

come

out at 6 a.m. Friday to

the Sierra Vista ranch, one of
the two election sites to picket
and persuade the “scabs” recent-

have erected and decorated in
the back of a station wagon.
On election day the students,
300 farm workers and communityresidents persuaded, watched,
and shouted encouragement as
more than half the workers refused to vote. Out of 732 eligible
voters, approximately 385 voted.
Of these votes, 281 were for the
Teamsters. Approximately 41 ballots were left blank and 12 workers voted for the NFWA or
AWOC, who were not on the ballot.

Phil Farnham, director of the

DiGiorgio

boycott,

pointed

out

that many votes came from office and cafeteria hands, not farm
workers. “If you add the number
of workers who didn’t vote to
the number who expressed their
protest by leaving the ballot
blank, you have a clear majority
who do not favor the Teamsters
but rather the NFWA. We feel
we could easily win a fair and
secret election,” he said.
Some workers, he added, were
brought to the polls again after
refusing to vote once, and all
of the workers, voting or not,
were identified by their employer. “A priest who was asked to
certify the election as fair at
the second site in Barrego Springs
refused,” he remarked.
One of the students summarized what he thought general student sentiment to be: “Besides
the mental and physical fatigue
and cases of near sunstroke which
resulted, I think that we were
all ‘filled up’ by this experience.
It was the climax of our training
session: we were close to tears
about the injustice and concentration camp atmosphere of the
elections. The workers were not
allowed to talk to the strikers.
They were brought up to the
election site in grower buses and
trucks, and herded into the election area. Over half of the workers at the Sierra Vista ranch refused to vote anyway.”
During the week, the students

dKVtf

a visit to one of the Valley’s
growers, who was said to be the
“model” grower” by the NFWA
volunteer staff. His camp was
clean and his men were fairly
happy, they said. The workers ate
well; the cook was provided by
the grower and the food was paid
for by the men. The grower explained the phases of the grape
growing farm operation and
stressed the “squeeze” growers
were put in when facing the big
retail chain stores with their
“magic” prices 19c, 29c, 39c. He
admitted that increased labor
costs would not force him out
of production. Lunch for the students was provided in the camp’s
mess hall.
paid

When asked by the students
and staff whether a worker could
invite someone from NFWA into
his room in the camp, since the
grower had said that the men’s
rooms were completely their own,
he said that they would have to
talk to the foreman about it.
When pressed, he admitted that
the foreman would have to
check with him and that he would
refuse permission. The same
grower was present at the election protest, where he approached a priest saying, “You call yourself a Catholic priest.” The priest
replied, “You call yourself a
Catholic.”
The students’ prdominant impression after their visit was that
the issues involved in the strike
had to be kept separate from the
personalities, since negotiations
with the “nice” growers were as
difficult to obtain as negotiations
with the nasty ones.
Famham told the students that
the goal of the boycott is to hurt
DiGiorgio economically. The way

to do this, according to Farnham,
is to go to stores and explain
that you are going to picket them
unless they agree not to buy DiGiorgio brands for the duration of
the boycott and to take those
brands off their shelves. If they
will not do the latter, because
they are afraid of getting stuck
with the merchandise and need
to clear out storage space to
stock other brands, they could
be persuaded to have a sale of
those brands.
Some students belonging to
student action groups who were
at the orientation pointed to their
cooperation with NFWA as part
of an intensifying identification
of student groups with poor peoples’ groups and the corresponding development of offers of
direct assistance which students
make to those groups.

Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AFL-CIO) members, as well as those in NFWA,
feel that th religious, civic and

student support for the strike
marks a new development in
labor unionism. They say that the
idea of unionism is here linked
to much broader ideas of social
justice and community development. The student presence in
Delano and the support which
they are offering the boycott is
accepted by proud people, whose
feelings are perhaps voiced by a
Filipino farm worker who addressed the student group saying:

“I am glad to see you students
here, because this country is
being run by the rich, those who
do not know what it is to be
poor. You will be running the
country in the future. And you
will have known what it is to be
poor.”

?Ot*&gt;CEMTURr.FOXp»«»»ot»

.-IMS

mum

"IT'S FUNNY AS ALL GET-OUT!"
Times

Sean Connery
AIR-CONDITIONED

j TONIGHT I

KENSINGTON J AT I
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JoanneWoodward
JeanSeberg
'A Fine Madness”

r 9« P*PP*rd, Ursula Andrass

»°

Good Seats StiM
Available at Box-Office

Salute to GODARD*
—

LEONARDO'S

ly brought in to work by DiGiorgio not to vote.
The workers also prayed for

of DiGiorgio’s canned products,
marketed mainly under the brand
names of S &amp; W Fine Foods,
Treesweet Juices, and White

TONITE THRU SUNDAY

A JEROME HEUMAN Production

—

Breathless
Jcan-Paul Belmondo, Jean Scberg
PLUS

Alphaville

(Tarzan vs. IBM)

Anna Karina and Eddie Constantine
—

Mon and Tues.

"CONTEMPT"

with Brigitte Bardot

l

U

—

"My Life to Live

LUNCHEONS
11:45 until 3:00

‘Avanta Garde Leader of the "Nouvelle Vague"

DINNERS
5 p.m. until 10 p.m.
SUPPERS
10 p.m. until 1 p.m.

GKLtt

TECHNICOLOR

AT THE

3165 Bailey Ave.

"

with Anna Karina

TF 4-6298

WRICK O’NEAL- COLLEEN DEWHURST

CLIVE REVIII'WERNER PETERS - JOHN FIEDLER

DEWateCENTER
1 ■
1

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VAIN ST-

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�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNn/ERSITY OFNEW YORK ATBUFFALO

SUMMER

GARDINER

|—«..__

I

EDITION

VOLUME 16

GIs' Lawyer Bases Defense
On Illegality of Viet War
In an exclusive interview with
the Spectrum, Stanley Faulkner,
attorney for the three privates,
said that he would appeal the
court’s action to the United States
Court of Appeals and expects at
that time to have a full review
of the controversial case.
The three draftees inducted into the Army last December are:
James Johnson, a 20-year-old Negro from the Bronx, N.Y.; Dennis
Mora, a 25-year-old Puerto Rican,

NO.

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY IS, 1966

Exclusive Interview—

The United States District
Court for the District of Columbia
dismissed a suit Monday by three
Army privates seeking to enjoin
Secretary of Defense Robert S.
McNamara from sending them to
Vietnam

(See

based

Mr. Faulkner cites this
other example of the
States’ failure to abide
treaty obligations to the

According to Mr. Faulkner, the
U.S. does not have S.E.A.T.O.
agreement on the war and, that
even if S.EA.T.O. was to approve,
it would still have to be agreed
upon by the Security Council of
the United Nations. Without such
approval, the waging of war is a
violation of the U.N. Charter,
which has the status of a treaty
in U.S. Law. Mr. Faulkner therefore contends that the war is in
violation of U.S. treaty obligations to the U.N.

According to Article 2 of the
Constitution. “He (the President!
shall take care that laws are
faithfully executed.” Mr. Faulkner, explaining that treaties have
the power of law, said that the
President, by violating the S.E.A.T.O. Treaty, the Kellogg-Briand
Treaty, and the U.N. Charter, is
not within this provision of the
Constitution. He further claims
that the President is not empowered to continue the war by the
Tonkin Bay Resolution, nor has
Congress passed a declaration of

He further stated that the S.E.

To Be or Not To Be:

TEMPORARY
By PAUL SCIABARRASI
&amp; MICHAEL
D'AMICO

For almost a year students and
watching
have been
workmen clear ground throughout he campus to make way for
the new temporary building most
commonly known as “the annex."
Building progress is approaching
its final stages. In another month,
work should be completed.
It was a year and a half ago
when
administrators
decided
something had to be done to
accommodate the needs of the
faculty

upon the 1951 Supreme
Youngstown Steel vs. Sawyer and
other Supreme Court cases, the
soldiers cannot be sent to Vietnam involuntarily.

as an-

United
by its
United

Nations

war.

52

expanding University. According
to Mr. Doemland of Planning and
Development, we were becoming
"way out-spaced” and the best
solution to the problem was the

construction of temporary buildings.
COST;

1.2 MILLION

attempt to be as economical as possible, nine annex
buildings went under construction at a cost of 1.2 million
dollars. This breaks down to approximately $10 per square foot
of air-conditioned office and
classroom space. It was disclosed
that the temporary buildings are
planned to be used for a period
of about five years and then torn
down when the Main and Bailey
campus takes on the new character of the Health Sciences De-

In an

partment.

NEXT MONTH

■

MARKS ANNIVERSARY
The contract says that 120
days is the time alloted to con-

struct the

buildings. We have
watched the workmen for nearly
four times that specified time.
Mr. Ooemland offered no reason
for the obvious delay.
The annex buildings are plan-

ned chiefly for housing administrative offices. This is aimed
at making more classroom and
academic office space available
in the more permanent buildings.
For this reason, the "gold annex
building" behind Hayes Hall now
accommodates the offices of the
Bursar, and Payroll and Personnel.
The offices of Admissions and
Records and the Comptroller will
also be moved into an annex.
Moving these offices out of Hayes
will make 22,000 square feet
available in that building for
academic offices and classrooms.
NEW BUILDINGS
HAVE A PURPOSE
The
Foster
Annex,
better
known as “skip the view from
Norton terrace,” will provide
another 17,000 square feet of
office space. This annex will be
similar to annex “A” which has
been in use for the last year on
the Bailey Avenue side of the
campus. Last year that annex
hpused the departments of English and Political Science.
Because of the growing needs
of library facilities, Lockwood
Annex has been built as an extension of Lockwood Library.
This will make available more
stack space and a reading area
suitable for 300 students.
(Conl'd on Pg.

8)

Stronger Student-Faculty
Ties Sought by Siggeikow
and Dannis Mora
From loft to right: Privatos David Samat, Joal Turtal, Jamas Johnson,
by Robert Joyce, Notional
Photo

also from the Bronx and a 1964
graduate of the City College of
New York; and David Samas, 20,
of Modesto, California who was
married June 17. A fourth draftee, Joel Turtel, 22 years old of
Brooklyn, N.Y., is seeking a similar injunction against the government to prevent it from sending
him to Vietnam but under seperate counsel.
The three servicemen were taken into custody and are being
held in “administrative restriction” at Fort Dix, New Jersey
pending an investigation by the
Army. Aside from severe penalties if they refuse to obey orders
to ship to Vietnam, the three
to
now face imprisonment of
10 years and a fine of up to
$10,000 under sections of the
Army Code dealing with Treason
and Sedition.
Mr. Faulkner said that the
three privates could not legally
be sent to Vietnam against their
wills. Mr. Faulkner based his plea
that the war is illegal on the
Kellogg-Briand Pact, the United
Nations Charter, and the SouthEast Asian Treaty Agreement. He
contends that the war in Vietnam
is in violation of these treaties
and sections of the United States
Constitution and that, therefore,

A.T.O. agreement allows for an
individual member to react to a
Court decision in the case of
“common danger” if it meets its

own “constitutional process.”
Since the U.S, Congress has not
voted a declaration of war, Mr.
Faulkner says that this provision
has not been met and that President Johnson’s actions in Vietnam thus violate the S.E.A.T.O.
treaty.

Mr. Faulkner said that Johnson
has also violated the Tonkin Bay
Resolution of the Congress. That
resolution stated that the United
States’ actions in Southeast Asia
must be consonent with the U.S.
Constitution, the S.E.A.T.O. Treaty, and the U.N. Charter. He contends that Johnson has not abided
by this part of the Congressional
resolution and that it cannot
therefore be cited as carte
blanche approval for U.S. actions
in Vietnam.

Mr. Faulkner further stated
that the war is in violation of the
Kellogg-Briand Treaty of 1928. In
this treaty the U.S. agreed to the
outlawing of war as "an instrument of national policy.” He also
cited the Nuremburg Judgments
to support his case against the
war. Since these Judgments were
adopted by the United Nations,

The Dean of Students, Dr.
Richard A. Siggeikow. has been
awarded a sum of $400 by the
FSA to be used in the development and operation of a program

Guardian

Mr. Faulkner went on to say
that in 1951 the Supreme Court
ruled that the President did not
have the power to seize the
Youngstown Steel Mills because
a threatened strike might interrupt the flow of materials for the
Korean War. “If the government
cannot seize private property for
an undeclared war,” he said, “it
certainly cannot seize persons for
an undeclared and illegal war.”
Mr. Faulkner pointed out that in
the Youngstown case the Supreme Court emphasized that
only Congress can declare war
and that, according to the Court,
Congress has '“exclusive constilu
tional authority to make laws necessary and proper to carry out
the powers vested by the Constitution ‘in the government of the
United States, or any Department
or Office thereof.’
Faulkner
said that the courts have ignored
this part of his case and that
"they are afraid to face up to the
implications the Youngstown
Case has for the sending of draf
tees to die in Vietnam.”
Mr. Faulkner summed up the
legal merits of the case with the
statement that “the government,
based on the Youngstown Case
(Cont’d on Pg. 7)
”

designed to improve faculty-student relationships on campus.
Dr. Siggeikow and Dr. Peter M.
Boyd-Bowman of the Modern
Language Department, in their attempt to bridge the faculty-student gap inherent in a quickly
growing university, feel that
steps must be taken to arrest an
increasing spirit of student "depersonalization.”
Dean Siggeikow stated, "Our
students do not differ from their
counterparts throughout the coun
try when they complain that they
never meet the faculty or that
the faculty has no interest in
students. Many students individually and in groups consistently
express interest in improved faculty-student eommunialion and
urge more contact through discussion groups, edffec
similar affairs.”

hours, and

Dr. Boyd-Bowman, formerly of
Kalamazoo College, Michigan, believes that the advantages of a
small liberal arts school, in closer

faculty-student relationships, can
be attained in a large university
through an attempt by the faculty to entertain the students informally in their homes.
Prof and Mrs Boyd-Bowman
were host to such a gathering last
semester, co sponsored by the Office of the Dean of Students,

where

the nonacademic atmosphere quickly obviated any feelings of being in a classroom situ-

ation, consequently allowing

for

personal faculty-student rapport.
Among other favorable results
was the acknowledgement of the
student as an individual, capable
of communicating his intellectual

and esthetic ideas.
In an article which appeared
in NASPA, the Journal of the Association of Deans and Administrators of Student Affairs, Dean
Siggclkow stated that, “There is
something seriously wrong with

higher education when the university experience, which should
be continually exciting and challenging, shows signs of degenerating into a depersonalized learning factory. Students are not only
rebelling against the faculty in
adsentia and

the administration
in particular, but against society
in general. To them the increas-

ingly depersonalized atmosphere
of our growing university system
too obviously reflects certain aspects of what they consider an
imperfect society in the non-campus world.”

The manifestation of this on
the State University at Buffalo
campus has instigated a renewal
of the program to improve faculty student communication.
The
present plan, being conducted on
an experimental basis, includes
luncheons and impromptu facultystudent collaboration.
Dr. Siggelkow sincerely feels
that, if an earnest effort is made
by both the faculty and the student body, the realization of a
stronger faculty-student bond will
be attained.

�PACE

TWO

SPECTRUM

Friday, July 15, 1966

Radioisotopic Technique Institute
To Provide Radioactive Experience
The Western New York Nuclear
Center will sponsor a
Radioisotopic Tehniqiie Institute
on campus from July 18 to August 12.
About ten people have enrolled
in the Institute and will receive
graduate credit in Biology 544,

Research

Isotopic Tracer Techniques. Besides UB graduate students, representatives from area hospitals

and industries will attend.
According to Mr. C.C. Thomas,
Institute Coordinator, “the pri-

ENGLISH 5358

design of tracer experiments, isotope applications in research, low
level radiation detection, biologi-

mary purpose of the Institute is
to provide individuals with ex-

perience working with radioactive
materials so that they may eventually apply radioisotopic techniques to their research work.”

cal effects of radiation, and production of radioisotopes.

Mr. Thomas also indicated that
the Institute’s orientation is directed mostly toward the biologi-

Softball Standings Thru July 11
Won

Psychology
Chemistry
Nuclear Center
Biology
Physics

cal sciences.

The topics the Institute will
consider include atomic structure,
radioactivity, detection of radiation, health physics principles.

Education
Adm. and Rec.
English

Literary Criticism to be Discussed on July 20
A panel discussion, “Literary
Criticism: Its Aims and Purposes.” will be presented on July
20 in the Norton Conference
Theatre at 1:30 p.m. Participants
in the discussion will be Mac
Hammond, Paul Carter-Harrison,
Clive Hart, Eric Mottram, Arnold
Stein, and Richard Stern
Paul Carter-Harrison, the young
playwright who makes his home
in Holland, is in residence on
campus this summer. He will direct his two new plays, “Top
Hat” and "Pavane for a DeadPan Minstrel,” for their Buffalo
premiere later this month.
Clive Hart, a noted Joyce
Scholar, has published Structure
and Motive in Finnegan's Wake,
A Concordence to Finnegan's

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
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Wake, and Twelve and a Tilly.

Co-editor of the Wake Newsletter
and a member of the faculty at
the University of Newcastle, New
South Wales, Australia, he received his Ph.D. from Cambridge
University. Mr. Hart is a member
of the visiting faculty for the
summer sessions.
Eric Mottram is a visiting professor at New York University.
Mr. Mottram’s publications include American Literature; Books
on America, Plays of Clifford
Odets, and Companion to American Literature. He has been a
faculty member at the University
of Zurich, University of Malaya,
University of Groningen, King’s
College and University of London.
Arnold Stein has published
Perilous Balance, Answerable
Style: Essays on Paradise Lost,
Heroic Knowledge, and Johne
Donne's Lyrics: The Eloquence
of Action. A member of the visiting faculty, he is professor of
English at the University of
Washington.

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Richard Stern, a novelist, is the
author of Gold, Teeth, Dying and
Other Matters, and Stich. Dr.
Stern, who received his Ph.D.
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„

Meeting of July

5, 1966

were nine members
tenth arrived late) and a
recording secretary provided by
the office of the president.
Present

(the

The first item of business centered around the question of admitting representatives of the
campus news media to committee meetings. An extended discussion weighed various considerations. Those favoring admission
argued such points as the need
to maintain the confidence of the
University community by avoiding an aura of secrecy, and the
possibility of controlling the
quality of the reporting by having representatives of competing
media present. Those opposing
were concerned that the effects
of inaccurate reporting, attribution, etc,, would necessitate the

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uated in the election of the Task
Force with its mandate. He described how the committee envisaged its role and stressed its
elected nature and its responsibility to the students and the
faculty. In return, the Dean expressed great interest and gave
the impression that once ; he is
installed as president he Will give
strong support to the work of the
committee. He suggested that
the co-chairmen should contact
him directly by phone to establish formal relations.

committee’s consuming its time
in explanation and correction. A
better method, they said, would
be for the Chairmen to release
to news reporters and all interested parties memoranda based
on the official minutes of each
meeting.
It was moved

and seconded
that the committee admit representatives
of the Spectrum,
WBFO, and the Graduate Forum.
Vote: Yea 4; Nay 5; one ab-

-

sent.
Regarding the preparation of
m em o r a n d a, the committee
agreed that they should contain
sufficient detail to be genuinely
informative. Further, that they
should be issued as soon as possible after meetings and that they

should reiterate the
committeemen were
representatives of
and faculty bodies

After Professor Sapp had given
his report, the suggestion was
made that the committee should
establish a tentative time schedule with the view of making an
interim report of its findings and
recommendations by a fixed date.

fact that the
duly elected
the student
and not ap-

The committee now turned to
discussion of the impending
telephone conference call scheduled with Dean Meyerson for 2
p.m., this date. The committee
agreed that the co-chairmen and
Professor Sapp should participate
in the conversation. It then considered what the tenor of the
call should be. It agreed that
the independent mandate of the
Task Force should be stressed.
At the same time, however, it
should be made clear that the
advice and counsel of the new
president would be weighed carefully and his support welcomed.
It was further agreed that he
should be made aware that the
object of the Task Force was not
to intrude on those administrative decisions which were indeed
administrative in their character
whether at the university, college, or departmental levels but
rather to ensure that the whole
academic community had a role
to play in decision making which
directly affected academic life.
a

The second item on the agenda
was a report from Professor Sapp
on his recent meeting with Dean
Meyerson in New York City.
(When it had become apparent
to the chairmen that a formal
meeting between the Dean who
was in N.Y.C. and the committee
would not be possible in the immediate future they had arranged
for Professor Sapp, who also happened to be in that city, to confer
informally with him.)

-

Because this conference was impromptu there could be little
preparation, but Professor Sapp
sought to cover the relevent details. He explained to the Dean
the background which had event-

MID-SUMMER SALE
ALL SUMMER SPORTWEAR
STARTING FRIDAY, JULY 15th

1
0
0
0

2
2

Last Week's Scores
Physics 14, Adm. and Rec. 1
Wells (W), Sanford (L).
Chemistry 12, English 6: Klein
(W), Feldman (L).
Psychology 11, Nuclear Center
7: Laughery (W), Anderson (L).
Biology 6, Physics 4; Goodman
(W), Wells (L).

from Ohio University, is professor of English at the University
of Chicago and a member of the
SUNYAB faculty for summer sessions.

pointees.

Poise nlyy

—

0
0

Task Force: Memorandum II

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LUNCHEONS
11:45 until 3:00
DINNERS
5 p.m. until 10 p.m
SUPPERS
10 p.m. until 1 p.m.

j
|

�Friday, July IS, 1966

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Stratford Excursion Planned

A Review:

Syracuse's AS YOU LIKE IT

The Summer Activities Staff
has scheduled an excursion to
the Stratford Shakespearean
Festival in Stratford, Ontario, for
the weekend of July 22-23. Reservations have been made for
the evening performance of
Twelfth Night on Friday, July 22
and tickets are also available for
either Henry V or Don Giovanni
at the Saturday, July 23 matinee

Syracuse University’s Touring
Company performed a generally

excellent

As You

Like

It last

Friday evening in Baird Hall despite the inadequate dramatic
facilities on this campus.

As many Shakespearean productions, contrivances obtruded
inorganically from the Syracuse
company’s production. The most
egregious obtrusion came with
the treatment of Jacques’ lines,
“All the world’s a stage . . .” as
one of literature’s One Hundred
«

performance.

Great Moments; a spotlight on
the speaker dimmed according
to the progress of the seven stages of life. Hymen’s appearance
toward the end of the play (as
she blesses the married couples)
resembled the annual lighting of
the White House Christmas tree
—somehow flashing lights got
Scene from the Syracuse University Touring Company's
caught in her robes. Music usualProduction of AS YOU LIKE IT
ly provides another source of
obtrusion in Shakespearean proher father, happiness in her while David Fendrick played an
ductions, but in this one the friendship with Celia, starcrossedexcellent fool as Touchstone.
music of Richard Dyer-Bennett ness in her love for Orlando, and Katherine Manney as Celia only
was both appropriate and tastemasculinity when she feigns mansucceeded in irritating some of
ful.
hood). Miss Aspinwall failed esthe audience with her incessant
Janet Aspinwall’s inability
in her ability to feign smile even when the role did
not call for a Cheshire cat. Miss
sufficiently vary her performance™ manhood (Good bless her), and
within the difficult role of Rosamuch of the later sense of the
Manney was, in short, too cute
lind marred an otherwise out- play depends upon this ability, for words.
standing performance. The actDespite these petty annoyances
Allen V. Williams played a solid
ress playing Rosalind must be
Orlando even though he looks and several inorganic obtrusions,
the Syracuse Touring Company’s
able to assume various changing like Ricky Nelson. Kenneth Bowlproduction of As You Like It
es as Jacques probably gave the
aspects of the character (e.g., depression over the usurpation of play’s outstanding performance, was lively and expert.

CNVA to Hold Peace March on August 6;
Vigil in Memory of Hiroshima Dead Planned
On Saturday, August 6, 1966,
the Buffalo Committee for NonViolent Action (CNVA) will hold
a “Peace W a 1 k.” Twenty-one
years ago on August 6, the United States became the first and
only country in the world to use
nuclear weapons on human be-

ings.

One Act Pbys
To Be Presented
On July 22-23

At 8:15 a.m., the bomb was
dropped on Hiroshima, killing
78,000 people. At 8 a.m., walkers
will meet at the fountain near
Norton Union for a one-hour silent vigil in memory of those
killed by the bomb. At 9 a.m., the
walk will begin on Bailey Avenue
and move to the draft induction
enter at the corner of Bailey and
Kensington, where picketing and
leafleting will take place. It will
then proceed down Kensington to
Main Street; up Main to Jefferson; Jefferson to Best. At Jefferson and Best, leaflets will be

(Clearance

“Pigeons,” by Lawrence Osgood, involves three women and

THURSDAY, JULY 14th

“The Blind Men” by Michel de
Ghelderode is theater of the grotesque at its best. Ghelderode is
a Beglian dramatist whose plays
have as their environment medieval Flanders.
The dramatist
writes of a world overtaken by
the Devil in which man’s morals
have become grotesquely distorted by lustful and selfish desires.
This particular play by Ghelderode was inspired by a painting
of the same title by the Flemish
painter Breughel.
Both plays are directed
Joseph J. Krysiak,

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handed out. The march will then

proceed down Best to Main; Main
to North; up North to the Peace
Bridge. At the Peace Bridge a
statement will be given to American official concerning disarmament, foreign policy, and Ameri-

can involvement in Vietnam.

If you are a U.S. Citizen, aggressive and would like to
grow progressively please call me today. (Collect of
course).

BOB ROCHFORD

301-823-2200 Ext. 476

It

will be requested that the statement be sent to Washington.
All walkers will be asked to
recognize the non violent discipline which the nature of the
march embodies. All interested
persons are urged to participate.

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THE SPECTRUM

Summer

Two One-Act plays, “Pigeons”
and “The Blind Men,” will be
presented by the Workshop Theatre in the Millard Fillmore Room
on July 22 and 23 at 8:30 p.m.

unfolds in the unlikely setting
of an abandoned and junk-littered lot in New York City. A struggle for control of the trio carries the drama to an “absurd”
conclusion.

Tickets, at $16.00. $16.50.
$18.00, are now on sale at
Norton Box Office. You may
the Box Office at 831 3704
tickets and reservations.

Main Street &amp; Thraway
1205 Niagara Falls Bivd.

�Friday, July 15, 1946

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

You Re
What's
Do You
only "the very responsible people, the most responsible.” “These
people have to have the freedom
granted by the
fto use the drug]
Government.” The “psychiatric

By DAVID GARDINER

profession,” he believes, should
be left to run its own LSD affairs. It is on this note that the
interview ended.

Dr. Shutkeker is a man of profound decency. I sensed in him
an intense concern for his fellow
man, a concern most evident in
the application of his science to
what he believes to be humanistic ends.
These grounds supply a basic
framework within which the issues raised by the interview can
be fruitfully discussed. Dr. Shutkeker’s science tends to draw
from the s o c i e t y’s prevalent
value-system in several important
areas; and it is precisely this
identification which I understand
to preclude the achievement of
a more humane and human so-

In the past few months a spate
of articles has appeared in the
popular media concerning the increasing use of the conscious-

and sense affecting drug,
LSD. For the most part, this
outpouring reeks with conventional wisdom.
ness

ciety.

Without exception, for example, evaluative (and even descriptive) reports seem to be
based on the assumption that
LSD is a “problem.” Of course,
as the wisdom goes, it can be
used for good or evil (like any
other great scientific breakthrough), but it must be kept
from the “kick-seekers” and other
“irresponsible” elements. Laws
are urged (and the lawmakers
respond) to protect society from
these people, and to protect these
people from themselves.
In an effect to get beneath
and beyond the conventional wisdom, I recently conducted an interview with Dr. Bruno Shutkeker, an experienced researcher in
LSD. Dr. Shutkeker seemed eminently qualified for work with
this much-discussed drug: he is
Chief of Neurology and Psychia-.
try at Buffalo Veteran’s Administration Hospital, and has been
with the hospital the 17 years
since its inception. Dr. Shutkeker was highly impressed with
the drug’s potentialities during a
brief period of research in England about five years ago. Consequently, after 3 year’s efforts
in this country, he finally received permission in early 1965 to
use the drug. He has conducted
77 research projects in the short
time the drug has been available
to him. The projects consist primarily of the administration of
LSD to ‘mentally ill’ subjects for

&gt;

therapeutic purposes.
Unfortunately, our interview
fell short in its attempt to penetrate staid convention. Unmis
takably an intelligent and enlightened man, Dr, Shutkeker
nevertheless shares numerous facets of the conventional wisdom
to which I refer. Science too
frequently converges with “common sense,” and, in Dr. Shutkeker's approach, the implications of
this (rather modern) phenomenon

become discernable.

In this article, I try to convey
the sense and substance of the
interview with Dr. Shutkeker,
and to evaluate that interview as
well. My own position, at the
broadest level, is critical of both
LSD-use, and of the critics of its
use.

The "Fictional Nature
of The Experience

I began by asking Dr. Shutkeker if he believes the LSD-user’s
view of “reality” (while under
the influence of the drug) to be
“distorted” or “inaccurate.” If so,
or if not, then on what grounds?
(Here, I wanted to have him discuss his epistemological, psychological, or sociological position on
the nature and production of
thought and sense perception.
The question is almost embarrassing in terms of its breadth and
scope; nevertheless I still think
it is a crucial question and relevant for our concern here.) Dr.

Shutkeker covered the spectrum,
in his answer, from a kind of
naive realism to radical relativism: "Consciousness is the accumulation of experience,” he
said, and the individual’s experience differs from culture to culture. We all have our “dogmas,"
“distortions,” and “irrational beliefs,” he continued, but "there
can be a relatively less distorted
viewpoint;" as such, the “illusions
induced by LSD constitute “a
severe departure from reality."
He seems to accept the notion
of perceptual and conceptual relativity, that “there can be no
cut-off position in what defines
reality,” but LSD “exaggerates
what you see, colors, intensifies
is a wild exaggeration of
normal conduct.” The experience
is transcendental, he said, and
“the transcendental nature of experience is fictional."

The Promise and the Peril
Dr. Shutkeker feels that no
“drug has come along which is
as promising as this [LSD].” He
explained that its wide range of
effects and applications make it

“extremely useful” for “research
and therapeutic" purposes, i.e.
for treating “illness.” The drug
“breaks down barriers and resistances,” and “allows us to get

inside the unconscious of the
individual,” Dr. Shutkeker said.
It makes the task of the psychoanalyst easier: 6y “filtering out
a great deal of fact from fiction,”
the psychoanalyst is able to help
“reconstruct the individual, free
from the fantasies, the prejudices,
the superstitions” which disturb
him.

It LSD has all this promise, it
also presents a grave danger,
according to Dr. Shutkeker. The
illicit use “by the very people
who shouldn’t be using the drug,”
can produce long term “mental

damage” and lead to “impulsive
actions leading to death.” As a
kind of instant intellect,” LSD
contributes to the “drop-out"
problem, destroying the opportunities of these people. It “purges
people from the responsible student group.” The purged are “the
wild ones, the irresponsible, the
reckless, the gamblers,” for use
of the drug results in “the loss
of judgement, reason, controls.”

...

Lack of Explanation
of Drug's Effacts
Dr, Shutkeker did not explain,
to my satisfaction, the source of

this “fiction.” When asked to
account for the recurrence of
certain effects (e.g., the feeling
of euphoria, enhanced childhood
recall, etc.) which appear to be
characteristic of the drug's use,
he radetcribad these reactions
rather than offering any explanation for them. The effects are
definitely precipitated by the biochemical change in the body, Dr.
Shutkeker said. The question remains, however, why these specific effects?

Demonstration* and LM&gt;
Different Kinds of Rebeftion
LSD-users come from almost all
areas of life, Dr. Shutkeker said.
He sees the illicit users on campuses as a group distinct from

the anti-war demonstrators and
civil-rights activists. Both manifestations are a result of “a dis-

enchantment among all of us,”
but the latter constitutes an “intelligent’ form of rebellion, and
the society will be the better for
it.” Dr. Shutkeker is pleased with
the protestors, seeing them as
“people who want their freedoms” ip the face of a “neurotic
hierarchy” of power which threatens these freedoms.
Responsible Utilization
of the Drug
Because of the danger involved, Dr, Shutkeker feels that the
drug must remain available to

People as Problems
Dr. Shutkeker partakes of the
“social problem” syndrome. Deviant and excessive behavior and
thought—a few examples: illicit
LSU-use, homosexuality (“the
homosexual is not a bastard, but
he has problems,” Dr. Shutkeker
remarked), mental illness, neurotic and irresponsible elements
in prestigeous positions (e.g., J.
Edgar Hoover in the political
realm, Timothy Leary in the aca-

demic)—are perceived as “problems” for the society. The society
is seen as an imperfect one—in need of “intelligent” criticism
—but basically rational and responsible in its structure. In some
way, “the society” is named as
the cause of these maladies, but
the “social problem” approach refuses to consider the society sick
in and of itself. The troubles and
the policies of the society are
questioned, but never its structure. The disaffected are therefore to receive therapeutic treatment as a solution to their (and
society’s) problem.

Where is Mental Health?
Nowhere does Dr. Shutkeker’s

problem-orientation more glaringly reveal its underlying presuppositions than in his attitude
toward LSD-use. The illicit use
of LSD constitutes a problem, but
the employment of the drug in
the attempted solution to another
problem is most highly praised
and promoted. Here, the capitu-

lation to the dominant valuesystem of the society is put into
practice as the ‘disturbed’ subject learns how to get along—a
“cure” which may be far less attractive than the “illness” in two
salient respects: first, it remains
to be demonstrated that the individual who is able to function
effectively in the society is necessarily closer to sanity than one
who is unable to do so. Indeed,
the contrary may be true, that he
who has become disturbed by
the harshness and incredulousness of contemporary reality has
taken the first step to a healthier
state of human existence. In this
person, a sensitivity to the human
condition—even if his focus is
merely on the manifestation of
this condition in his own miser-

�Friday, July 15, 1966

PACE FIVE

SPECTRUM

illy Don't Know
Happening
Mr. Jones?

.

able self—begins to emerge, the
contradictions with which he is
required’to live begin to break
through. If human health is conceived as something more than
adjustment to the society, then
a genuine cure would mean this
individual’s rebellion against the
established universe of discourse
and behavior; and, further, the
ultimate collapse of this universe.
Social Control and Responsibility
The therapeutic approach raises a second issue, one intimately
bound to what I have just discussed. I have in mind the area
of social control. As Dr. Thomas
Szasz (Syracuse' University), for
one, has pointed out, our society
is steadily expanding the category under which it classifies
people as “mentally ill.” Moreover, he remarks at length about
the extreme difficulty involved
in determining what is mental
illness and what is deviancy or
eccentricity. (Dr. Shutkeker himself was highly ambiguous on the
issue of what it means to be ‘in
touch with reality.’) Szasz’s account of the history of man’s
dealing with mental “disease” is
as grotesque as it is enlightening. There is little reason to
believe that psychiatry represents any qualitative shift from
Lumping illegitithis pattern.
mate and strange behavior and
thought under the category “mental illness” becomes a convenient
way to (1) keep the deviant from
disturbing social equilibrium,
and/or (2) assure that he begins
to think and act as he must to
get along. The society and the
individual are simultaneously “rehabilitated.” Social control is acceptable and pleasant under the
aegis of science.
This business of social control,
however, is not one that Dr.
Shutkeker sees as problematic.
He is persistent in his argument
that LSD must be kept in the
hands of the “responsible” members of the society; he strenuously insists that the only legitimate
application of the drug is in the
treatment of the mentally sick.
Who are the responsible ones?
This is quite clear: the psychiatrict profession should be left
to “govern itself;” Dr. Shutkeker
grants the Government the right
(does he have a choice?) to determine which elements in society may have access to LSD;
In order to begin research in
the first place, he “had to satisfy
the Sandoz Co, [the only drug
company producing LSD at the
time] that we were responsible
people.”
Leaving aside momentarily any
judgment on the illicit use of
LSD, I submit that it is the very
elements designated by Dr. Shut 1

keker as “responsible”—the established professions, the Gov-

which have
themselves to be the most
irresponsible in terms of their
use of scientific breakthroughs.”
These elements are characterized
by their amoral unaccountability. Like all elites, they are, at
best, accountable only to each
other. It is not the “kooks" and
the “mentally disturbed” who
have used the potentialities of
advanced technological society
for the purposes of ever more
destructive and brutalizing
wars; it is not the reckless “pot-

ernment, industry

proved

—

heads" who have turned out vast
quantities of harmful or useless
drug “curets;” it is not the outcasts who have irrevocably polluted the air and water. All of
these tragedies have been perpetrated by the “responsible”
segments of society. And these
are not “mistakes,” “accidents,”
or merely problems of an imperfect society—they seem to be the
in-principle results of the institutional arrangements

of this

society. If the discovery of LSD
is as “neutral” a discovery as
was the discovery of nuclear fission, which position Dr. Shulkeker takes, then woe be to us
if the “responsible” people are
able effectively to confine it to

their exclusive domain. Marcuse
makes the case for the deviant
a very clear one: “In reserving
for me a special niche of meaning and significance, you grant
me exemption from sanity and
reason, but in my view, THE
MADHOUSE IS SOMEWHERE
ELSE.”

III.

An Alternative View of

LSD and Society

The narrow medical or social
problem approach is inadequate
to the attainment of humanistic
ends—it is probably a primary
hindrance to this effort. Undoubtedly, the medical method
supplies ameliorative benefits for
many genuinely miserable human
beings, but the larger sickness
of the whole society is left untouched.
It seems to me that in any
attempted understanding of
human beings, we must make an
assumption of both an element
of contingency and an element

of autonomy in the conduct of
human affairs. This allows us to
talk about choice as well as
causation (social and otherwise);
a shred of humanity is thereby
acknowledged in even the most
apparently ‘wretched’ and ‘determined’ individual or group (a
sort of ‘humility check’ for despots).

This assumption permits us to
view the current use of LSD by
a considerable and increasing
number of people from all walks
of life, as both a product tof
certain conditions, and as a
choice of an alternative way of
Kving. Both components of this
view compel a critical scrutiny
of the ‘old” ways of living. What
does the given society deny in
the area of the satisfaction and
development of human needs and
faculties? With what contradictions, frustrations, and harsh
realities does the established state
of affairs require a person to
live? Can there bt any value in
the ‘alternative way of living?’
In answer to that last question:
yes, there is every indication that
LSD provides us with some useful
clues and insights into how we
can

better shape our personal

and social lives. This is not to
say that living life on LSD is in
itself desirable; I have something
quite different in mind here:
Many of the effects of LSD—among which we can include (I)
the ecstatic nature of the experience; (2) the freshness, novelty,
and vividness of sense perceptions; (3) the explosion of hypo-

statizcd ‘world-views;’ (4) the reversal of the oppressive time
structure of advanced industrial
society; (5) the elimination of the
overly 'utilitarian' aspects of
memory; (6) the breakdown of
physical aloofness; (7) the transformation of prevalent attitudes
toward death —seem to point to
better ways of living, indeed. In
a sense, then, there emerges out
of the effects of LSD-use a possible index to the failure of mankind as well as some touchstones
for a new departure.
I will try to clarify why the
departure for alternatives should
not reside in the actual use of
LSD as a life style. I submit that
it is possible and desirable to
approximate LSD experience by
the exercise of one's own faculties in activity. The accomplishment of this mode of existence
would establish a far more meaningful and serious criticism of
LSD than any provided by today’s

conventional science and

wisdom;

this criticism, simply stated,
would hold that any pleasurable
benefits which accrue to the individual while under LSD cannot
compare, in terms of richness
and depth, to those which are a
result of the individual’s free

self-activity—cannot compare because they are a result of this
‘free self-activity.’ The induced
experience, though pleasurable, is
superficial and transient; on the
other hand, that experience which
is effected by the creative activity of the full organism is the
concrete world of objects and
events, while still pleasurable, is
thorough and richly cumulative.
Dewey’s work on the nature of
experience makes the above disindeed, inestinction possible
capable. Experience would be inauthentic and unsqbstanlial, as I
understand Dewey, to the degree
to which a person allows LSD to
do his “doing” (fashioning) and
“undergoing” (receiving) for him.
—

'Free self-activity’ refers to a
quality of life which resembles,
in many respects, childhood experience. Childhood is the period

of fullest exercise of the individual's cognitive and sensory apparatus in activity. The child is
ceaselessly involved in a process
of "discovery” (which is essentially a process of criticism, since
it continually seeks to probe beyond and beneath that which is).
A relatively uncircumscribed sat-

isfaction of the senses characterizes this period. Hut these capacities dwindle, and practically stop,
in contemporary civilization as the
person becomes "fixed” with a
narrow set of abstractions, expectations, and behaviors. It is this
"fix" which is biochemically shattered by LSD, laying the basis for
symbolic and sensual modification. The quality and content of
childhood experience probably
plays a large part in the production of the incredible and manifold effects of LSD-use.
It does not seem unreasonable
to conjecture, then, that the more
closely adult life constitutes an
extension rather than a denial
of childhood experience, the less
dramatic will be the changes in
any

one choosing to use LSD.

(It occurs to me

that this would

be a much saner and effective
way to eliminate whatever "peril”
the use of LSD might present
than is the current trend toward
arbitrary restriction.) But what
arc the chances of achieving a

society which extends the “polymorphous perversity" of childhood into adult life? The man
who first clearly raised this issue,
Freud, thought it impossible.

But the prospects may be more
hopeful than Freud believed. For,
as I have used the term, “free
self activity” obviously does not
describe any static state of affairs. It is intended to be a
dynamic and open-ended concept,
an attempt to draw the individu
al into an “involvement” in life.
(It should be clear by now that
“involvement” in life does not

mean “identification” with

its pre

vailing modes; quite the contrary,
it calls for Camus' notion of “creative rebellion.”) As such, despite
extremely inhospitable conditions,
activity with a view jo personal

and societal enrichment and
change can begin, in some measure, immediately. In this sense
the goal is primarily a means:
but it is not a means which puts
off life for the sake of some
future utopia. Rather—as an expression of the refusal (everywhere) to succumb to the “deathin-life" existence of the present
society
this goal (or means)
compels us to begin to live life
now as an alternative to the
current inhuman social order,
and with a view to the eventual
collapse and replacement of that
—

order.

�Friday, July 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

(Comment

.

.

If You Scratch
Hard Enough...
The Spectrum interview with Mr. Stanley Faulkner (see
page one), defense counsel for the three GIs who will refuse
to fight if sent to Vietnam, indicates once again the totalitarian nature of military conscription. Mr. Faulkner’s defense, to the naive, appears air-tight: how could the United
States violate an individual soldier’s conscience by coercing
him to fight against his will?
The beauty of Mr. Faulkner’s defense lies in its exposure
of the inconsistency with which the government of the United
States wages war. Faulkner is arguing the unconstitutionality (and therefore illegality) of the war in Vietnam on the
government’s own grounds (i.e., treaties and pacts to which
it is a party). Thus to ask the GIs to fight in Vietnam is to
ask them to break the law.
The United States has ratified the Kellogg-Briand Pact
(1928), the Nuremberg Judgments (1946), and the United
Nations Charter (1945) and has thus made them the law of

the land. The war in Vietnam violates these treaties and,
as Senator Morse has pointed out, is thus unconstitutional.
The same inconsistency became apparent when David
Mitchell stood trial for refusing to cooperate with the Selective Service System by invoking the Numerberg Judgments as his defense (e g., an individual is duty-bound to
obey the higher law than that of his country if his conscience
so dictates). The United States, being the “victor” and therefore the “judge” in that war, had only Nazi crimes in mind.
Little could it conceive of the same argument being used
against its own war crimes by an American citizen.

In fact the attitude of most Americans seems to be
that their country can never be accused of war crimes for
the simple reason that their country never goes to war; it
only intervenes on occasion to restore peace and prosperity
to a wretched world. The essential dishonesty of governments
in general when they are called upon to judge themselves
becomes no where more apparent than in the present American justification for its war in Vietnam. Dean Rusk continues
to place sole blame for the American action on the North
Vietnamese, while Robert McNamara defends the latest
escalation as merely a response to provocation by the
enemy. Thus the United States, it seems, has become bereft
of free will; it only reacts to the other side.
If justice were to be served in the Mitchell case and
the recent ones involving Luftig and the three GIs, they
would be acquitted of all charges against them. The United
States, so we learn in high school and even in college, is
the one nation which guarantees freedom of conscience to
its citizens. But most of us come to realize at one point or
another (the three GIs are now learning it under house arrest at Fort Dix) that if you scratch a government hard
enough, you will find totalitarianism.
How could the United States allow a citizen to defend
himself on the grounds that he will not participate in an
illegal war or commit war crimes and then acquit him?
The question goes to the very heart of what government
is all about. All we can do is to plead for consistency on
the part of the District Court of Appeals and commend Mr.
Faulkner for his Diogenean search for an honest court.

THE

SPECTRUM

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
BUSINESS MANAGER
ADVERTISING MANAGER
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

STEPHEN A. CRAFTS
SHELDON BERGMAN
SUSAN SCHOLL
ED SUMMER

EDITORIAL BOARD

ELLEN CARDONE
ALICE EDELMAN
JOCELYN HAILPERN
CARLA HARRISON

GINGER HOLCOMBE
MICHAEL D'AMICO

JOANNE LEEGANT

MARTY SADOFF
BILL SHERMAN
JULIE SULLIVAN
PAUL SCIABARRASI
SANDRA SMITH

flRST CLASS HONOR RATING

EDITORIAL POLICY It

■V

THE

jCetteri to the

,

cldilor

Editor Emeritus Defends SPECTRUM
TO THE

EDJTOR:

I was amused and somewhat
annoyed to read an obvious reference to me and my newspaper in
the Summer College Board Review, included in the article “A
Critical Look at College Visiting”

by Stan Cramer (p. 16).
Immediately under the somewhat ambiguous heading of
“Don’t Believe All You Read” we
find the following paragraph:
“I know of one college, for example, where the student newspaper is acknowledged not to be
a representative organ of communication. In fact, it’s a one-man
operation run by a fifth-year senior recently described by one
member of the alumni board as
“a left-leaning, sandaled supporter of unpopular causes who is
satisfied to exist in an intellectual womb.” Any counselor visiting this college who inferred
some student-body characteristics
from the college newspaper would
be badly misled (although he
might draw some valid conclusions about the college’s adminis-

tration from the fact that the

newspaper is permitted to operate.)”

The “one college” that Stan
knows of is his own school, the
State University of New York at
Buffalo, the newspaper his own
student paper, the Spectrum, and
five years have indeed elapsed

between my initial admittance to
U.B. and graduation this year.
Beyond these facts, however, the
paragraph suspiciously misleads
the reader.
(1) Stan says the paper is “ac
knowledged" not to be “a representative organ of communication”. This is very true; I “acknowledged” myself on a local
TV panel show in relation to the
opinions expressed in my editorials (which certainly “represent” the opinions of a majority
of students). In relation to the
diversity of news and editorial
opinions appearing in the paper
as a whole, I can only offer the
fact that, under my administration, the Spectrum won First
Class Honor Rating from the Associated Collegiate Press for fair
and complete reporting.
(2) Stan neglects to tell us that
the quote “by one member of the
alumni board” is taken directly
from the letters-to-the-editor column of the Spectrum. We printed
that letter in the interests of
presenting all shades of opinion
(i.e. being “representative”) so it
seems a little unfair for Stan to
use it as “evidence” of our bias.
(3) Stan flatters me more than
he realizes by saying that last
year’s Spectrum was “a one-man
operation." He must think I am
truly talented to put out a twenty-page paper, twice a week, and

still make the academic honor
roll both semesters. I suspect it
is more accurate to suppose that
Stan never bothered to notice
the eighty or so names of hardworking kids who appeared on
the masthead every issue.
(4) Finally, Stan asserts that
“valid conclusions” may be drawn
about the S.U.N.Y.A.B. administration “from the fact that the
newspaper is permitted to operate” (emphasis mine). Are we to
believe that the administration is
overly “permissive”? Or perhaps
we are supposed to think that
they are exceptional in their paternal tolerance? In fact the freedom of the Spectrum has been
won through hard and bitter battle over a number of years. The
fact that the administration “permits” a free press is no more
worthy of praise or approbation
than the fact that most architects design buildings which do
not fall down and kill people.
In both cases the men in question are merely doing what might
reasonably be expected of them.
I can only hope that Stan’s insight into the college visiting
problem is more accurate than
his disposition toward his own
college newspaper.
Most sincerely,
Jeremy Taylor

Editor-in-Chief,
Spectrum, ’65-’66

Escalation Is Improper Term
TO THE EDITOR:

Your Friday editorial, “The Escalation,” interested me particularly because I seem to agree
with your position, while at the
same time I object to some of
your points. I think I share your
general disapproval of war as a
solution for problems such as
the many-sided one in Vietnam.
I think we are equally concerned
that the President’s simple explanation of who is invading
South Vietnam and who has a
“right” to be there is so widely
disagreed with by many people
who should know the area well.
I think we are both amused to
see Mr. Johnson pooh-poohing
the polls when they have turned
against him for the time being.
But I object to your use of the
term “escalation” in the context
of the recent bombings near
Hanoi and Haiphong. Escalation,
to my thinking, is the exchange
of military attacks which, not
producing results for either side,
advances to a medium of attack
on a new level. Replacing guerr i 11 a s by organized divisions
might be escalation. Substituting
attacks on enemy troops with
attacks on the enemy’s strategic
supplies is escalation. Moving
from spot-bombing of industrial
plants to nuclear annihilation of
cities is escalation.
But spot-bombing the large oil
storage facilities at Hanoi and

Haiphong is not to start a new
tactic; it is to move a monthsold tactic to a new location. Nor
is there an element of surprise
about the move, except to us

Americans. The North Vietnamese
have regarded attacks on their
cities, and particularly on strategic points in the cities, as inevitable. According to repeated
reports in the New York Times,
the large Vietnamese cities have
been partially evacuated, beginning months ago. You point out
that one could bomb Lackawanna,
kill thousands of people and yet
claim to be striking military targets three miles from Buffalo.
However, if one is not bombing
Lackawanna in general, but rather concentrating exclusively on
the steel-producing complex along

the lake shore, if the dozen or so

adjacent blocks have been completely cleared of people, if all

Lackawanna’s children and old
people and many non-essential
men as well have been moved out
to Dunkirk or East Aurora or
Springville weeks before, and if
the steel plants themselves are
operating on skeleton crews
(mostly military personnel), one
is not going to kill thousands of
people. It happens that an oil
storage depot can be run by a
handful of men, not the several
hundred it would take to sustain
a large factory complex. And
when that handful passes by the
anti-aircraft guns which ringed

the depots (before they were
bombed) they were as aware of
the risks as conventional soldiers
are.

In the recent bombings I do
not see hundreds of innocent
lives lost in a surprise attack

which could never have been anticipated, either in timing or in
kind. I see a rather controlled
operation which destroyed much
of the country’s resources and
killed mostly, if not entirely,
those who were either soldiers
or civilians aware they were taking risks like soldiers. As a case
of escalation, I think you highly
overrate the incident of last
week. It is not escalation, but
only one more act of war at the
bottom of an ever-growing list
of such acts.
I do not wish to justify the
bombing, but rather to put it in
perspective. I have serious doubts
that either we understand the
thinking of the Vietnamese or
vice versa, and that our acts have
the meaning for them which we
suppose them to have. I share
your feeling that the President
has taken the war upon himself,
and in a way excluded those of
us who disagree with it from
I
participating in its strategy.
would go further than your suggestion that it is crimes against
humanity which constitute military victories; war itself is a
crime against humanity.
Raymond W. Michaels

Sadoff Attack Refreshing
TO THE EDITOR;

Marty Sadoff’s attack upon the

“intellectual classical” cartel of

film reviewers was unfortunate
only in that it was brief. Whatever does Mr, Sadoff mean by
“intellectual classical?” Certainly
he does not refer to the Spectrum's other two film reviewers;
unless, of course, one defines “intellectual” as “obscure” or “confusing.” If, on the other hand,
one means by intellectual “wellinformed,” we could not grant
that appellation to the Spectrum's
other two reviewers any sooner
than to Hr. Sadoff himself. Certainly they are well informed
about those pictures, those directors. etc. with which they are

familiar. If confronted by a new
film, a new director, however,
whence their information? The
answer is easy: do not talk about
the film to be reviewed, talk
about that with which one is already familiar. Everyone will find
you an intellectual. Furthermore,
there is already a prejudgment of
intelligence here. Example: Taubman (wasn't it Taubman) was at
one time a sports writer; then he
became a drama critic for the
New York Times. Would anyone
call a sports writer an intellectual? No. But it is fairly easy to
call a drama critic or film reviewer an intellectual simply because of the medium itself. As
for myself, I should call Taubman

neither an intellectual sports
writer nor an intellectual drama
critic. He is simply an observer.
What the reader wants to know
from him is not how intelligent
he is but what his reaction is to
the film. This reader is tired of
“comparisons,” “parallels,” and
other “intellectual” linking-up.
One always feels one must go
through the reviewer to get to
the film. Mr. Sadoff, whose first
review for the Spectrum must be
regarded as a refreshing attempt
to do away with the “classical"
style, allowed the film to speak
more loudly than the reviewer.
Let us have him as your reviewer
in the fall.
Milo Vannucci

�Friday, July 15, '1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

1

(Cont’d

from Pg. 1)

and others, does not have the
power to send draftees to fight in
an illegal war in Vietnam.” In
response to the Federal Judges
ruling that the issue was a political rather than judicial one, he
quoted from the 1960 James Madison Lectures at New York University by Justice Douglas, who
said, "political questions should
no longer be used as a thicket
behind which the judiciary retreats.”

ernc
eu
Sean Connery
JoanneWoodward, Jean Scbcrg
IN HIS WILDEST ROLE' WHAT HE DOES TC

The three servicemen are under “virtual house arrest at Fort
Dix,” according to Mr. Faulkner.
“They were put under constant
guard and restricted to their
rooms after being taken off in
handcuffs last Thursday, hours
before they were to address a
public meeting. The Army showed
that it was afraid that others
would also refuse to fight in Vietnam by arresting them before the
public meeting and consequent
publicity. This action is frighteningly similar to the tactics of
Nazi Germany and the present
day system of house arrest in
South Africa."
He went on to claim that “the
one million students who took
the selective service examination
in order to avoid the draft demonstrated the unpopularity of this

war.”
“If the industrialists arc really
so patriotic" he said, “let them
demonstrate it by giving up two
years of their profits. If our young
men must leave their education,

their families, and risk their lives
for two years, the least the industrialists can do is give up their
profits for a similar length of
time.”

GIs are receiving
from the peace and
movements. Officials
from C.O.R.E., S.N.C.C., the National Coordinating Committee
Against the War in Vietnam, Women’s Strike for Peace, Retail,
Wholesale and Department Store
Employees, and S.D.S. have joined in their defense. Donald Duncan. the former Special Forces
sergeant who spoke at U.B. last
spring, has also expressed his
support.
In a joint statement issued
before a news conference June

30, the four GIs explained their
position in these words: “Each
of us, through individual considerations, deeply believes that
the war in Vietnam is illegal,
immoral, and unjust. Contrary to
our government's claims that the

war is in the interests of both

the U.S. and the people of Vietnam, we believe that the U.S. is
now and has been supporting
dictators in Saigon, who seek,
not the interests of the majority
of their people, but rather their
own visions of power. The Vietnamese people have the right to
determine their own future and

not the future we have planned
for them. It was upon this political principle that the United
Stales secured its own freedom
in 1776. In recognition of this
fundamental fact we are refusing
to serve in Vietnam.” One of
the privates said, “When the
new Nuremberg trials begin,
some day we don't want to be
among the defendents. This war
is illegal, immoral, and unjust.
Unlike Eichmann, we are not
‘just following orders.’”

Mr. Faulkner concluded his interview with the Spectrum with
the prediction that "history will
eventually show that the position of these fellows was correct
and in the best interests of humanity.”

(AND A FEW OTHER LOVELY CHICKS) IS CALLED

THIS SUMMER THERE
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�Friday. July 15, 19M

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Newport Festival to Featwe
Dylan, Ochs, Howling WoK
The Newport Folk Festival,
featuring folk artists from the

Student Enters New

Annex to Find Same Old Lines

To Be or Not to Be
(Cont'd

from P.

...

Of this there can be
doubt. The pleasant view
Norton terrace has been
out by an “iron curtain.”
once short, direct route
from the side entrance of Harriman Library to Diefendorf has
been obstructed by the Diefendorf Annex. The spacious quad
enclosed by Crosby, Lockwood,
and Diefendorf has been filled
with the Library Annex.
campus.

1)

little
from
shut
The

Another annex has been built
for the Physical Science laboratories. all of which will be in
one building. The Acheson Annex. in addition to several laboratories, will have eight classrooms.
The multicolored Diefendorf
Annex, between Diefendorf Hall
and Harriman Library, will also
be used for classrooms and faculty offices. According to Mr.
Doemland. only the Acheson and
Diefendorf Annexes, will be used
for classrooms.
The Capen Annex is unique
in that it will provide 5,000
square feet for animal quarters.
This Annex we can call the U.B.

zooolgical center or Bailey’s
Butcher Shop.
So this is the story: nine annex buildings at a cost of $1.2
million that were to be built in
120 days but took one year. So
enter into the books that more
classroom space needed plus 1.2
million dollars equals nine obstacles to the beauty of our

This pattern has been indicative of the general planning of
the entire project. In the eyes
of the planners it appears as
though convenience ha's overshadowed any considerations for
the beauty of our campus. However, one can be fairly certain
that any pictures in this year’s
University catalogue will reflect
only the long ago elegance so
much a part of the old U.B.
Perhaps it was impossible to
locate the entire project at an
area of the campus where their
presence would not be so overbearing. What has, in fact, been

FOR SALE

WANTED

2 TVs, $25 uch; autoharp. $35;
5 speed racer. $40; ’58 Volkswagen. $400
good condition.
Call 893 8219.

Female Roommate Wanted. Fur
nished Apartment near U.B.
Rent reasonable.
Call 836-0085
evenings or afternoons.

M.G.—TC, 194$. Excellent origin-

Female Roommate for next year
(’66-'67). Grad Student or Upper
Classman with Apt. or will locate
one. Write: Toby Leder, 360 Riverside Dr., Manhattan, N.Y. 10025

—

al condition.
(in

First

Rebuilt engine

England). New top.
buyer

$1,350.

takes. 835-2450.

2 Bedroom Ranch. Living room,
and Dining room. Snyder. N.Y,
Hot water, radiant heat, beautifully decorated. Outside newly painted, assumable mortgage. 839-1834.

PERSONAL
Person who witncessed accident
in front of U.B. on June 16th
please call TF 6-7911.

'Underground'
Cinema

TONIGHT!
(ALSO

SAT. and SUN.)

ADOLFAS MEKAS

Hallelujah, The Hills
“The wierdest, wooziest. wackiest comedy of the year!”
—Time Magazine

plus

mantled.

Although the need for more
space is recognized and the annex building seems to be an economical solution, we pose this

question; could not Planning and
Development have planned a
little further ahead and provided

$1.2 million worth of classroom
and office space which could be
conveniently converted to blend
with the “character” of the new
campus five years from now?
Perhaps they have planned that
far ahead and the temporary annex is not as temporary as they
announced.
The general reaction of the
students to the new buildings
echoes of disapproval. It is said
that no more annex-type buildings are to be built and the
general consensus is that we certainly have enough. We hope that
the next two or three years will
not necessitate the construction
of more annex buildings or the
permanence of these “temporary”
buildings.

By JOHN MEDWID
Marijuana has played a part in
another interesting legal case and
one which appears to be turning
into a cause celebre in Eugene,
Oregon. Annette Buchanan, 20,
a University of Oregon junior
and managing editor of the Oregon Daily Emerald, her school
newspaper, refused to identify
the seven students she interviewed for an article on marijuana.
Having refused to answer a
grand j u r y’s questions earlier
this month she was ordered last
Monday (June 20) to reveal the
names Wednesday morning.
After again refusing to reveal the
names of the students, District
Attorney William Frye asked the
judge to hold her in contempt
of court, which carries a penalty
of up to six months in jail and
a fine of $300.

The Kiss
AT THE

GRSLCI

TF 4-8298

traps.

In keeping with the aims of
the Folk Foundation, traditional
artists from the United States,
Canada and the British Isles will
be an integral part of the 1966
festival. Many of these artists
have been located by the field
work done by the Foundation
during the past year.
T h e o Bikel. Oscar Brand,
Brownie McGee and Sonny Terry,
Judy Collins. Bob Dylan, Jack
Elliott, Mimi and Dick Farina,
Flatt and Scruggs. Carolyn Hester, Bessie Jones, Clark Kessinger,
Phil Ochs, the Pennywhistlen,
Jean Ritchie, Grant Rogers, Buffy
Sainte-Marie. Joseph Spence, and
Howling Wolf are among the
many performers appearing

at

the 1966 Folk Festival.

New Chairmen
Folk Dance
Appointed in Education
Program
The School of Education at UB
has appointed four new department chairmen, it was announced
today by Dean Robert S. Fisk.
Named were: Dr. Robert S.
Harnack, chairman of the Department of Curriculum Development and Instructional Media; Dr.
George E. Holloway, Jr., chairman
of the Department of Educational
Administration; Dr. S. David Farr,
chairman of the Department of
Educational Psychology; and Dr.
William Eller, chairman of the
Department of Language Arts and
Elementary Education. All appointments are effective immediately.

The Murder

A folkdance program for students and faculty will begin
Thursday, July 21 from 8-11 pm.
in the Norton Terrace (or in Haas
Lounge in case of inclement
weather).
The program, under the direction of Mr. Trevor Barker, is intended as a recreational activity
rather than a class and is planned primarily for people with no
previous contact with folkdancing. All the dances will be taught
so that everyone may participate.
The program will run weekly
for the duration of Third Session. Students and faculty are invited to attend the entire series
or any of the individual sessions.

of Gonzago

The issue here is not the use
of drugs but the delicate balance
between the requirements of a
journalistic code of ethics and
the power of government to compel testimony which may violate
that code.
Secondly, there is the question
of the use to which her testimony
might be put. The information
that Miss Buchanan could give
to the grand jury could not be
used to build a narcotics ease
since none of the sources admitted to using marijuana but merely talked about its “pleasurable”
effects, and Police Chief Elsworth
who is already investigating the
use of narcotics on campus does
not think that the names would
be of much use.
The central issue of the increasing power of government remains.
In a memorandum submitted to

Judge William Leary in opposition to the judge's order to Miss
Buchanan to answer the grand

jury’s questions. Hiss Buchanan's
attorney, Arthur Johnson, wrote,
“Newsmen recognize that it is
essential to the function of a
judicial body that it have the
power to compel disclosure of
information. But that power .
should not be and is not completely inbridled by legislation.”
The power of grand juries
should be clearly defined in law
to insure that neither freedom
of speech nor freedom of the
press is abridged. In the words
of Frank I. Cobb, the famous
editor of the New York World,
“It is not the powers that they
conferred upon the government
but the powers that they prohibited to the government which
makes the Constitution a charter
of Liberty.”
.

Contemporary American Arts: The Anarchic Explosion
Temple Beth Zion will sponsor
a series of lectures and movies
entitled “Contemporary American Arts: The Anarchic Explosion" from July 12 to August 4.

The program will feature the

ANDY WARHOL S

3165 Bailey A»e.

aceomplished is the removal of
the center of our Campus. Where
once grass added color, there
remains only the concrete tributaries of sidewalk. One heartening prospect is that they will
only be there for five years and
then, it is said, completely dis-

U.S., Canada, and British Isles,
will be held July 21-July 24 in
Newport, Rhode Island. In addition to the annual four days
of evening concerts and daytime
workshops, the Board of Directors of the Newport Foundation
have designated Wednesday, July
20, as a pre-festival day for children. Oscar Brand has organized
the children’s day, and Theo
Bikel, Judy Collins, Bessie Jones.
Jean Ritchie, and Buffy SainteMarie will perform. A group of
children from the city of Newport will perform singing games
of the United States and Canada.
Another innovation of the 1966
Folk Festival is the inclusion of
traditional folk crafts, which will
be shown at the daytime programs, and will make an important contribution to the children’s
day. The complete wool process,
from the shearing of sheep to the
finished wool tweed will be shown
daily by skilled artisans. A moun-

tain potter, wood carver, and basket weaver will work beside
Seminole Indian patchwork makers, an Eskimo ivory carver and
a Nova Scotia fisherman who will
weave nets and make lobster

following:
July 12, 1966

—

Introductory

lecture: The cross-fertilization of
the arts. The discussion will try
to show how music (serious and
popular) relates to the other art
forms such as painting, film,
poetry, novel and theatre. The
arts as a response to and a participation in the dominant themes
in American society.
July 14, 1966
Seminar and
lecture on “The Novel.” The
theme wil be the change in the
—

mood of the novel from the 50’s
to the 60’s. The shift in sensibility from, for example; Bellow
to Kesey, from Malamud to Friedman, from Mailer to Donleavy.
July 19, 1966
Film (to be
chosen from list below)
July 21, 1966
Lecture and
seminar on Poetry: The three
divergent strains; The “Academics,” the “Beats,” the “Black
Mountain Poets.” The seminar
will trace the tradition from
Whitman, Pound, Williams, and
Olson.
July 28, 1966
Lecture and
seminar on “Art Today.” After
a general introduction beginning
with action painting, the seminar
will discuss the two schools of
—

—

“pop” art and "Dadaism.” Guest
lecturer; James Hanson—Ph.D,
candidate in Philosophy at

S.U.N.Y.A.B.
August 2. 1966—Film
August 4, 1966
Concluding
lectcure on the history of the
film and a discussion of "What's
happening today?”
All programs will begin at 8
p.m. The Temple is located at
—

805 Delaware Avenue.

RECIPE FOR FREE LEMONADE
6
Sugar ’n Lemon sugar packs
(from cafeteria)

—

16

hi cup Ice Cubes

oz. Water
Mix thoroughly. Makes one pint

of Lemonade.

.

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                    <text>1

SUMMER

STATE UNIVERSITY OF

TASK FORCE

||

MEMORANDUM

VOLUME 16

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1966

NO. 51

10% Bookstore Discount Reinstated by FSA;
Board Rates Hiked $50 a Year for Residents
In its

June 29 meeting the

Board of Directors of the Student-

Prof. Scigliano Lecturing on the MSU Vietnam Project

Prof. Scigliano Appraises
MSU Vietnam Project
By ELLEN CARDONE

Professor Robert Scigliano of
the Political Science faculty of
Michigan State University discussed the controversial M.S.U.
Viet Nam Project in Norton Hall,
Thursday afternoon, June 30.

Dr. Scigliano, who will join the
SUNYAB faculty next fall, was in
Viet Nam with the M.S.U. Project
for three of its seven years. His
remarks concentrated on the
question of the place of the
University in the nation’s economic and technical assistance
programs.
M.S.U. became involved in
Viet Nam, he explained, through
the acquaintance of M.S.U. professor Wesley Fishel, and the
late President Ngo Dinh Diem.
The scope of assistance was; to
help administrative personnel; to
advise on government organization; and to teach courses in and
help develop the newly-formed
National Institute of Administration.

The project included from 28
to 130 advisors, at various stages,
and was involved directly and
indirectly in the spending of $25
million in U.S. aid, according to
Professor Scigliano’s own esti-

mates.
of the project have
charged that it was merely a
front for CIA operations and military assistance. Dr. Scigliano discussed these issues in detail,
noting that definite results had
come from the stated goals of
the project, such as better-organized municipal police and government agencies. On the other hand,
he found that the 50,000-man Civil
Guard, one of the three police
units trained by the M.S.U. Project was considered to be a direct
supplement to the army by the
Vietnamese Government. President Diem, according to Dr. Scigliano, viewed the Civil Guard as
a means of expanding the number
of U.S. supported troops beyond
the 150,000 man limit set by
Washington in 1957.
Critics

Dr. Scigliano called this particular branch of aid one of the
“activities which were strange, to
say the least, for a University.”
He found training of non-military
police acceptable, however, because M.S.U. has a school of
Police Administration qualified

to

provide

academic assistance.

To the charge of CIA “infiltration” of the project, the speaker
explained that much of the dispute on this point is due to the
fact that CIA personnel in question were never formally tied
to the project. Their presence,
however, was known to all involved, and Dr. Scigliano was of
(Corvt’d on Pg. 2)

Faculty Association accepted the
recommendation of its Sub-Board
ID that the original 10% Bookstore discount rate be reinstated
as of September 1.
The discount rate was cut to
5% by the FSA in its May 25
meeting According to the minutes of that meeting, the reduction was justified “in view of
the fact that there are no earnings or minimal earnings in the
Bookstore during the summer
months.”
The new discount rate will affect required textbooks and educational materials and will continue pending the audit report
of the fiscal year ending August
31 due to appear sometime in
October.
“As far as I know,” reports Dr.
Claude E. Puffer, Vice President
for Financial Affairs, “it (the
discount) will continue, but we
(the Board of Directors of FSA)
want to see the report prepared
by the public accounting firm
before we make a final decision.”
Dr. Puffer attributed a “lack
of enthusiasm for a rebate system” as a reason for the reinstatement of the 10% discount,

Draft Views Aired in
Congressional Hearings
Hershey Defends Student Deferments,
Favors More Universal Military System
WASHINGTON (CPS)
After
nearly two weeks as the subject
of hearings before the House
Armed Services Committee, the
military draft has found both
some harsh critics and some
—

strong supporters.
Rep. L. Mendel Rivers (D.-S.C.)
opened the hearings by raising
the question of lowering the current age level of 26 “substantially” during peace time. The
next day, Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of Selective Serv-

ice, said he wanted the limit
raised so that the draft could
include men up to age 35 who
had been deferred for some rea
son when they were in the 19to-26 age group.
And that’s the way it went
for the first week of testimony.
General Hershey said a lottery
wouldn’t work after members
of the committee and some members of the House and Senate
urged its adoption. Hershey said
the draft was fair after committee members cited long lists of
letters from their districts, and
defended
across-theHershey
board student deferments after
charges that only the poor were
being drafted.
members of Congress
took the witness stand to re
iterate statements that they have
been making publicly for some
time; the draft is not fair, a
lottery is better, and a universal training system is better still.
Then

Little that was new came from
the hearings, and they served as
the opportunity for a lot of people to once again praise their
pet plans.

For example, General Hershey
continually urged a more universal military system that would
take many of the poorer and uneducated young men who are
now rejected. Hershey stressed
that his idea was not to increase
the size of the armed forces but

to take the “disadvantaged” in
order to “teach them and better
their morals.” The general proposed that “the Army is the best
way for the country to raise the
educational and moral levels of
these boys&gt;"
The idea, while not
little or no response
mittee members who
pushing their own pet

new, drew

from comwere busy
projects.

Hershey was also ready with
a lot of facts and statistics to
show that the present system

works pretty well.

He said that 56 per cent of
the men who are deferred for

college study eventually enter

the service. This compares to
only 46 per cent of those who
are not deferred, the General
said, indicating that the Army
was more interested in people
with high levels of education
than those with little or no
schooling beyond grade school.
The big reason the draft is
under fire now, the general said,
is that it is taking more people
than it normally does. The requirements of the war in Vietnam, he said, mean that many
more men have to be called than
the draft
generally handles.
"When you start calling people,"
he said, “they start complaining.”

although both he and Student
Senate President Clinton Deveaux

ices.

favored the former.
The rate of board contract for
residence hall dining was raised
$50 per year from $435 to $485.
Mr. Thomas Schillo, Director of
Housing, indicated that pre-registered residence hall students
would receive an announcement
of the change in boarding rates
later this summer and would
have the opportunity to reconsider their contract if they so desired.
The Board of Directors also
voted to drop the diploma fee due

Sub-Board II recommended, at
the same meeting, that the Student Senate and Graduate Student Association appoint a student committee to investigate the
further development of the FSAowned 500 acre plot of land near
the new campus site.
"Student fees will remain the
same as they were last year,"
according to Dr. Puffer, although
he indicated that there will be
a substantial increase in the
amount of money going to student activities.

to improved state printing

serv-

&gt;

UB Pledges Assistance to
Philander Smith College
Long-Range Development
By JULIE SULLIVAN
In the development and operation of a long-range plan designed to improve the quality and
effectiveness of an institute of
higher education, the State University at Buffalo has agreed to
assist a predominantly Negro college, Philander Smith College of
Little Rock, Arkansas.
Two officials of the State University at Buffalo, Dr. Myles Slatin, acting Dean of the College of
Arts and Sciences, and Dr.
George G. Iggers, professor of
history, will serve on an advisory
committee that will direct the
total cooperative project. They
have announced that the University and Baldwin-Wallace College
in Berea, Ohio, will contribute
services and funds towards Philander Smith's efforts to “launch
a massive attack on its weaknesses.”
University personnel who are
skilled in development, administration, finance, curriculum, and
student personnel will make regular visits to the Little Rock
campus in order to advise a planning committee consisting of faculty and staff members from the

college.

If funds can be made available, the State University at Buffalo will provide supplementary
fellowships of $3,200 to each of
two faculty members who will do
advanced graduate work for a
one-year period subject to oneyear renewal and admission to

the graduate school at the University.
A summer study program, designed to provide opportunities
for further training and experience in the science disciplines,
will be offered by the Stale University to six faculty members
of Philander Smith. Each participant will be assigned to an individual Buffalo faculty member
who would accept the responsibility of training the Philander
Smith faculty member in research
programs, graduate seminars and
discussions as well as providing
individual guidance for selfstudy. Regular lectures and visits
to other institutions in the Buffalo area will be included in
the program.

The special summer session,
which will be held on the Buffalo
campus, would allow participants

from Little Rock to obtain outside professional experience without removing them from their
teaching responsibilities at Philander Smith. The emphasis of the
program will be focused on those
academic activities which would
contribute most toward improving
the teaching program at Philander Smith College. Upon completion of eight weeks of training
at the Buffalo campus, Philander
Smith faculty members will return to Little Rock.
Officials of Philander Smith
have noted that a lack of financial and moral support for the
College's activities and programs
demands that a more effective
and creative alumni program be
developed in order to increase
patterns of economic support.
Through the cooperative relationship with the State University at
Buffalo, Philander Smith College
hopes to develop the skills necessary in delineating projects, activities, and writing imaginative
proposals for Federal or private
foundations.

Because the college has experienced difficulty in attracting an
excellent quality of cultural programs, the University will contribute to its improvement by
sponsoring events on the college
campus.

Philander Smith is one of the
56 survivors of over 200 colleges
that resulted from nineteenth century efforts after the Civil War
to provide educational opportunities for Negroes. Despite the efforts it has made towards adapting its educational program and
activities to meet present day
changes, a 24-page critical study
of the College’s present status revealed that inadequate facilities,
overloaded faculty members and
insufficient funds are serious detriments to the achievement of
the aims and objectives of Philander Smith.

The officials feel that the impact of the College’s effort is “too
meager to give the College a boost
large enough to plunge it faster
toward the achievement of its
long-range goals." The State University at Buffalo will assist Philander Smith College in its efforts
to acquire sufficient physical, financial, and personnel resources
so that it may obtain greater fulfillment in the realization of its
potential.

1

�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Friday, July S, 1966

Sisson to Keynote Second Conference
Of School Personnel Administrators

Tha Dorian Quint at will pot-form In Concert July 11 and
Baird Hall at 8:30 p.m.

18 In

SOFTBALL
The Summer Sessions Softball
League got off to a flying start
Monday, June 27th, as the Admissions and Records team edged
by Biology 11-9 and the Nuclear
Center disintegrated the School
of Education 18-10.

pitched the victory and Don Ber3 hits to the winning cause. The School of Education was hindered somewhat
by the absence of a number of

ry contributed

their “stars.”

—ATTENTION—
Students Registered for the
Fell Semester:
Pictures for this coming year’s
I.D. Card will be taken in the
basement of Foster Hall throughout the Summer. Bring the green
I.B.M. card you got at Registration with you.
Go Now!! Avoid the September
rush!

Admissions and Records fashioned an early 9-4 lead but was
held scoreless in the last 4 innings, while Biology, led by Herb
Rosenberg's homerun, scored 7
runs to win. Eugene Goodman
picked up the win for the A 4 R
team and Keith Johnson suffered
the loss. Alan Wilsey hit a homerun for the loss's.
“

In the second game the School
of Education was unable to make
a 4-0 lead hold up as the Nuclear
Center got to a series of Education pitchers for 18 runs and won
going away. Chuck Anderson

FOR SALE

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Live Music Friday and Saturday

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FOLK SINGERS MON.

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TUES.

■

THURS.

Dr. Francis Sisson, president of
the American Association of
School Personnel Administrators
and Assistant Superintendent for
Personnel in Richmond, Virginia,
will keynote the second annual
Clinic Conference for School Personnel Administrators to be held
at State University at Buffalo
July 10-15.
Dr. Sisson will discuss “The

School Personnel
—Leadership Possibilities," before personnel administrators
throughout the United States at
the opening dinner of the conference, Sunday, July 10 at 6 p.m.

The conference theme is “The
School Personnel Administrator
and Social Processes in School
Systems.”
Mr. Charles S. Robinson,

execu-

Scigliano Lecture
from Pg.

(Cont’d

1)

the opinion that “their presence
was incompatible with the University’s presence” in Viet Nam.
After the first two years of the
project in 1957, this relationship
with the CIA was terminated at
the request of the M.S.U. Administration.

a number of monographs, articles,
and reports stemmed from the
project.
He also cited the positive impact on Vietnamese administrative training and organization.
Discussing weaknesses of the
project, he said that it had been
hastily begun with “little thought
of the political implications.” He
also stated that a small university’s part in foreign aid should
relate directly to its educational

Tracing the events that led to
the closing of the M.S.U. project.
Dr. Scigliano cited President
Diem’s disillusionment and chagrin at a number of articles critifunction, and he found this relacal of his administration publishtionship lacking in some cases
ed by M.S.U. Project professors where “the University
submerged
in American magazines. Some of its own objectives to those
of nathese, including two by Dr. Scigtional policy.”
liano, were simply critiques of
Dr. Scigliano cautioned that
election procedures and political
critics have failed to see the
parties in the Republic of Viet
M.S.U. Project in its essentially
Nam, while a later one by Profs. pre-war (or
pre-escalation) conJaffee and Taylor recommended
text, in which there was some
the ousting of Diem’s relatives
optimism that Diem’s government
and predicted the downfall of his
would be a successful bridge to
government. At this point, in
stable democrat in Viet Nam.
1962, the original contract with
M.S.U. expired and Diem did not
Dr. Scigliano summarized his
seek to renew it.
talk by supporting University aid
In his assessment of the entire to “underdeveloped” countries
project, Dr. Scigliano found seveprovided that such aid has an
ral strong points, including the
academic basis and is free from
quality of American personnel inU.S. and local government distortion of its aims.
volved, and the resulting scholarly production. He estimated that
He .stated that, through the
M.S.U. experience, the pitfalls of
This ad is worth 10(
academic aid might be pointed
on a delicious sundae
up and avoided in the future.

Dr. Scigliano’s appearance was
sponsored by the Political Science
department in conjunction with
the division of Summer Sessions.

Main, N. of Hertol

Let us be your

3435 BAILEY AVENUE
1 block from Rotary Field
WE CAN FILL YOUR HOMETOWN PRESCRIPTIONS
COMPLETE LINE OF ALMAY COSMETICS
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Slaw»Tartare Sauce "Rolls and Butter

The position of school personnel administrator, although it is
a relatively new one, “is taking
on increasing importance because
of the changing role of teachers
and the additional services provided for them,” Dr. Gibson said.
The duties of the school peradministrator, in addition

sonnel

to maintaining appropriate re-

cords, include the recruitment,
selection, and evaluation of teachers. In negotiations with teachers’
groups, the representative of the
board of education may often be
a school personnel administrator.
Because the tasks of the administrator require a general
knowledge in such fields as psychology, sociology, and business,
the clinic conference will make
use of understandings from these
fields. Conference participants
will be addressed' by State Uni
versity at Buffalo faculty members specializing in those subjects. Dr. James Steffensen of the
United States Office of Education
will also speak to the group.
These talks will be followed

by seminars conducted by outstanding school personnel administrators, including two past presi-

dents of the National Association
in addition to Mr. Robinson.
Also on the agenda is a coffee
hour at which the administrators
will meet with placement officers
from area teacher’s colleges for
the purpose of recruitment.

Old Post Road

Inn

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Main at Highgate

—

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Tatty Boneless Fillets "Crisp Golden

The program was arranged by
the University’s School of Education under the supervision of
Dr. R. Oliver Gibson, professor
of education, and is aimed at
providing personnel administrators with an understanding of current and anticipated problems
facing their profession.

pharmacy away from home

HIGHGATE PHARMACY
He’s at

live secretary-treasurer of the Association of School Personnel Administrators, will serve as consultant-in-residence for the conference. A former president of
the national organization, he will
assist with the planning, and conduct of the conference throughout the week.

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SUPPERS
10 p.m. until 1 p.m.

PIZZA by DiROSE

873-1330

WEDNESDAY I FRIDAY NIGHTS

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Two Locations:

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11:45 until 3:00

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�Friday, July 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

Task Force
Memorandum
ED. NOTE: Throughout tho lift
of tho Task Fore* Committee,
reports issued in the form of
memoranda will be available at
the candy counter of Norton Union shortly after each meeting.
The SPECTRUM will also print
each memorandum. The following is the report of the first

meeting.

THE PRESIDENT'S TASK FORCE
ON UNIVERSITY POLICY

Memorandum I
The Task Force was created by
President Furnas. Its members
were elected by their own governmental bodies.
Undergraduate Students
Donald Ames
Kim Darrow
Dennis Miller
alternate
Gene Cooper
Graduate Students
John Hellrigel
Jon Simplicio
Faculty

Dr. Hollo Handy
Dean William Hawkland
Dr. Raymond Hunt
Dr. John Milligan
Prof. Allen Sapp
First Meeting
June 22, 1966
Ten members and a Spectrum
reporter were present. Elected as
co-chairmen were Dr. Milligan
and Mr. Darrow. Objectives of
the Task Force were discussed.
It was stated that there is a dif-

ference between routine bureaucratic processing and policy making. It is up to the administration to run the day to day functioning of the University. However, the entire university community should have a voice in
policy formulation.
It was pointed out that if the
Task Force was to be effective
it would have the mandate of
President-elect Meyerson. It was
decided that he would be contacted within the week.
Sensitive issues must be discussed by the Task Force. These
critical areas must be examined
fully and in an uninhibited manner. If all meetings were to be
open, participants would have to
weigh words and free debate
would be hampered. Therefore,
meetings will generally be closed.
The Task Force will hold hearings to which individuals representing various positions will be
invited. If a particular meeting
is to be open, it will be announced in advance. The decision on
whether to allow the presence
of reporters from the Spectrum
and VVBFO at all meetings was
tabled. In any case it was emphasized that the university community would be kept fully informed through periodic memoranda. Also discussed was the
possibility of obtaining funds for
clerical and research assistance
through the Office of the President.

"As You Like It" Presentation
In Baird by Syracuse Company
The Syracuse University Touring Company will present Shakespeare’s AS YOU LIKE IT at
Baird Music Hall, State University of New York at Buffalo, on
Friday, July 8 at 8:30 p.m.
G. F. Reidenbaugh, production
director, has incorporated the inherent themes of comedy and
multiple romance into his personal conceptions of the play.
This production has amusing
lyrical tunes especially written
for the play by folk singer
Richard Dyer-Bennet. Colorful

bethan styles also highlight the
performance by one of the nation’s few summer touring .companies of graduate and undergraduate students.
The Syracuse University Company was inaugurated in 1964
and is in its third season of
operation. To date, the University group’s productions have included “The Plough and the
Stars,” “Thieves Carnival,” and

costumes in characteristic Eliza-

Norton Box Office, 831-3704.

two avant-garde one-act plays,
“Play,” and “Epiphany.”
Tickets are available from the

Film Committee
To Present
Ladykillers

"Ethics, Religion, and Scientific Outlook"
Slated as Topic of Feigl Lecture July 12
Dr. Herbert Feigl, professor of
philosophy and director of the
Center for the Philosophy of
Science at the University of Min-

nesota, will conduct seminars and
deliver a public lecture on the

campus of State University at
Buffalo during the week of July
10th.
Dr. Fegil, who first came into
prominence in his field at age
19 for a prize-winning monograph
on “The Philosophical Significance of Einstein's Theory of Relativity,” won favorable recognition
from Dr. Einstein for his first
book, “Theory and Experience in
Physics,” in 1929.
Dr. Feigl will discuss “Ethics.
Religion and the Scientific Outlook,” in a public lecture Tuesday (July 12) at 3 p.m. in Room

“The topic is an interesting
one,” said Dr. Peter H. Hare,
assistant professor in the University’s Department of Philosophy, “since Dr. Feigl has his
strongset
professional connections with the logical positivists.”
According to this school of philosophy! all talk about God, the
nature of being, value, the destiny of man, although it might
have emotional power and poetic

(or exciting) experience.”

Those who believe that, in the
domain of morality, religion and
the arts, there is an “irreducible
spiritual element" which cannot
be explained by the scientific
method, are, according to Dr.
Feigl, guiity of the “seductive
fallacy” they indulge in “wishful and sentimental thinking.”
When he was elected president
of the American Phiiohophical
Association in 1963, Dr. Feigl
titled his address to the Association, “The Power of Positivistic
■

merit, is nonsense because it is

not factually verifiable, Dr. Hare
explained.
In a paper entitled “The Scientific Outlook: Naturalism and Humanism,” Dr. Feigl has stated
that “questions which are incapable of being answered by the

Thinking.”

Born in 1902 in what was then
he was associated from 1925 to 1930 with
the “Vienna
Circle,” which
founded the Logical Positivist
school.
Austria-Hungary,

International Education Office
To Be Headed by Mrs. Robinson

By JO ANNE LEEGANT
Mrs. Sonia L. Robinson, formerly director of advisement for
University College, has been appointed director of a newly-created Office of International Education at UB. The office will
provide coordination, information, and assistance in all areas
of information connected with
international activities, supervise
the setting up of a file on overseas opportunities, grants and
fellowships for faculty and students, and coordinate and provide
services for faculty, students and
visitors.
The new office has been set
up as part of a statewide project
to enlarge the foreign study program branches, according to Mrs.
Robinson. The State University
of New York at Albany recently
created the office of Executive
Dean for International Studies
and World Affairs with administrative headquarters at Planting
Field, Long Island. The UB office
will act as a liaison between UB
and the Planting Field headquar-

He came to the United States
in 1930 on *n International
Rockefeller Research Fellowship
to work on the logical foundatinos of physics, with several
other prominent philosophers including Alfred North Whitehead.
He is the author of numerous
articles in the philosophy of science, philosophical analysis and
the scientific outlook.

ent,

Mrs. Robinson explained,
UB does not have a study-abroad
program. A student who wished
to study abroad must seek guidance from his department about

study plans, grants, job opportunities abroad, and credit for courses taken abroad. The new offcie
will have on file all available in-

formation for students and fac-

The subjects of the seminars,
which are intended mainly for
faculty and students, are “Psychology and its Place Among
the Sciences,” “The Reduction of

ulty. Mrs. Robinson spoke of the
eventual establishment of a study-

abroad program at UB.
The new office will handle
student and faculty exchange. In
addition to making all arrangements for the exchange, Mrs.
Robinson said that the office will
help orient the foreign visitors
who come to UB on a temporary
or permanent basis. An example
of such aid, cited by Mrs. Robinson, would be a foreign professor
who comes to UB and must find
housing for his family. The new
office will send a representative
who will help him look through
the information available at the
housing office, and explain unfamiliar terms.

Psychology to Neurophysiology?”
“Logical Analysis of the
Mind-Body Problems.”

and

Dr. Feigl’s visit to the University is sponsored by the Department of Philosophy.

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INDEPENDENT

TOUCE IN AMERICAN

JONAS

FIUAMAKEKS. THE MOST VITAL
MOVIEMAKINO TODAY I
MEKAS-

THE BRIG

An adaption of Kenneth Brown's play about the brutality of a U.S. Marin*
Stockade, filmed m N.Y. on the stage of the "Living Theatre" after it had bean closed
by the police for fax evasion. Met as and the cast .slipped into the theater by
coal
chute and made the ‘film
5 hours, i An ‘'Underground" classic with overtones
oI
cinema verite.

This Week

-

wbjl

AHMAD
JAMAL
COMING JULY 11
COMING JULY 18

DIZZY GILLESPIE

THE SIN OF JESUS

"Th« innar Undtcapa of 20* canlury man
cold, cruol, haartlaaa. Hop id. loo.lv
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IFna landscapa amargei from Robert Frank'! Dim with a crying, ferity'
ing nakadn.il
-Village Voica
-

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JULY 15

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AOOlFAl MIKAS'

GEORGE PEPPARD-JAMES MASON URSULA ANDRESS
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lox-omci

—

11

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A M. TO iO PM.

NOW SNOWING!

PRICE SCALE: RESERVED SEATS ONLT
MATINEES
—

17

HALLELUJAH, THE HILLS

starring

JIMMY McGRIFF
—

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TRIO
—

PIUS
ROBERT FRANK'S

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EVENINGS

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S2.SO | Arl, Sat. Hal. S2.SO S2.7S
Special Atteatiaa ta Theatre Parties—far itfa. call m-SM
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scientific method turn out not to
be questions of knowledge. They
are expressions of emotional tension or of the wish for soothing

THE LADY KILLERS

Johnson.

19 W. UTICA

147 Diefendorf Hall at the University.

ALEC GUINES5 and CECIL PARKER
'
I
'
Star in
The Wild Comedy:

The Summer Activities Film
Series will present The Ladykiller* on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday (July 11-14)
continuously from noon.
The film, a technicolor romp
through the criminal world with
a comic flourish, stars Alec Guinness, Cecil Parker, and Katie

39«

PAG! THRU

�Friday, July 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Editorial Comment

.

.

Cacotopia and Eutopia

.

The MSU Project
Prof. Robert Sdgliano, formerly of Michigan State
University and newly appointed Professor of Political Science at SUNYAB, spoke last week on “The American
University Abroad: The MSU Experience in Vietnam.” The
MSU Project became a cause celebre due mostly to the
Ramparts magazine article last spring which accused MSU
of acting as a cover for CIA operations in Vietnam in the
late 1950s. Prof. Sdgliano and his colleagues on the MSU
team helped stabilize the Diem dictatorship by strengthening
its administrative capacities and by training and arming its
police forces.
The conclusion, not drawn by Prof. Sdgliano, should
be that as the university becomes increasingly involved with
society, its complicity in society’s evils increases proportionately. A university can no more invoke the myth of “valuefree inquiry” after such enterprises as the MSU Project as a
deflowered maiden can regain her virginity.
The university, in short, must begin to hold itself morally accountable for its complicity in social crimes. Michigan
State must take at least part of the responsibility for the
war in Vietnam. To claim scholarly detachment at this late
date becomes only a means of evading moral responsibility.

By MARTIN J. SAWMA

The confusion of Liberalism’s
liberals is to immediately identify political freedom with human
emancipation and the power of
the State with the power of society. The frame of reference of
these emancipators, of these civil
libertarians and egalitarians, is
Law or the State itself. For them,
refinement of the Law is Justice.
Because of these assumptions
the liberal has begun to denounce
the Southern Negro movement
and particularly the Student NonViolent Coordinating Committee.
Withdrawal of “support” for the
Negro civil liberties struggle
marks the death of the Americcan liberal. In the Great Society
HE champions all causes and
there is no need for the constructive critic.
The Student Non-Violent Coor-

JAMES CALLAN

.

.

The Escalation
The Final Solution to the Vietnamese Problem may be
at hand—Lyndon Johnson has called for military victory
in Vietnam. So far that has meant the death of about three

civilians for every Vietcong.
The President has decided to “punish the aggressor”
to prove that might does not make right. To do this he will
enlist the armed power of the only foreign forces on Vietnamese soil.
The contradictions in the President’s actions seem endless. The aura of a man shaking his fist for peace, pitiful
in a man less powerful, assumes all the terror of schizophrenia. Negotiations become possible only through escalation, a variation on militarism’s peace through power theme
which seems to have gained the American ascendency over
a period of twenty years of Cold War. The polls which
Johnson used to religiously invoke as evidence of his consensus and which lately show a general disenchantment with
his Vietnam policy he now assiduously disowns, saying instead that he believes the war to be in the best interests
of the country.
The recent escalation, despite all the federal cant, cannot be construed as anything but the bombing of civilian
populations. The attacks have hit from two to three miles
from Hanoi and Haiphong. Maps indicate that the strikes
have been within populous areas of both cities. One could
bomb Lackawanna, kill thousands of people, and yet claim
that one was striking only military targets three miles from
Buffalo. Imagine too the destruction being wrought by
exploding and burning oil tanks—thousands of people must
be getting killed.
And for what? Even Lyndon Johnson admits that previous escalations have not prevented the dubiously massive
infiltration into South Vietnam by which he justifies the
latest escalation. Yet he persists in his strange notion that
people have to be punished for attempting to throw foreign
invaders off their ancestral homeland. Johnson seems to
see the war as an Asian cowboy and indian operation.
So our lives continue to be dependent upon the whim
of Lyndon Johnson. “There is one (man),” he said last week
in Omaha, “that has been chosen by the Americans to decide.” Johnson has thus taken the onus of the war upon
himself. In short, he has apparently become responsible
for the crimes against humanity which will be the price of
military victory in Vietnam.

THE

SPECTRUM
STEPHEN A. CRAFTS

BUSINESS MANAGER

SHELDON BERGMAN
EDITORIAL BOARD

ELLEN CARDONE
ALICE EDELMAN
JOCELYN HAILPERN
CARLA HARRISON
GINGER HOLCOMBE

JOANNE LEEGANT

MARTY SADOFF
BILL SHERMAN
JULIE SULLIVAN
ED SUMMER

FIRST CLASS HONOR RATI NO

EDITORIAL fOUCY IS

RY

THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

dinating Committee is an attempt
at basic change. Power is seen
by SNCC as the kay to this
change. That power is the power
of a people to make those decisions which affect their lives. In
large measure Freedom is this
power and is not merely the kay
to basic change but is that change

itself.
SNCC sees consciousness or a
people’s awareness of their cultural and social situation as a
necessary condition of the acqui-

sition of human power. The
building of this awareness is concomitant with the organization of
voluntary communities. Basic
change is the replacement of the
State everywhere with community.

As a result of its meeting in
May, SNCC will intensify its work
in local politics. If successful,

answer. The administration thinks

I take it as a maxim that he
who owns something has the right
to deal with it as he wishes, so
long as the exercise of that right
does not infringe on a basic right
of someone else. For example,
if you own a gun, you have a
right to shoot at a tin can with
it, as long as there’s not a man

A state university like this one
is owned by the people of the
state, who have delegated their
responsibility to the state legislature, who have in turn delegated their responsibility to the administration of the school. No
one has yet delegated that responsibility to the students, and
until they do students should
confine the expression of their
opinions to the proper channels.
They should not parade around
“demanding” that the draft deferment test be held off campus,
far less that HUAC be disbanded

objectively.

Who should run things at a
university? There are as many
answers as there are groups to
the administration should; the
students think the students
should; the faculty thinks the faculty should. Somehow it’s hard to
believe that everyone’s being totally objective about it. Let’s try
it my way.

The academic non-community
could, by pursuing SNCC’s pattern of thought and action, liberate itself. This liberation would
involve an extensive restoration
of the human world to the student. Study would give human
content and would no longer be
merely a means to existence. The
Movement on this campus should
seek the nature of the wrong not
in a defective inequitable administration but in the authoritarian
administrative procost itself.

the right
standing behind it, for then his
basic right to life would be violated. So then, to find out who
should run things at a university
(that is, who shall deal with the
university as he pleases) we need
only find out who owns it.
The case of a private or sectarian university is then rendered
easy. Those individuals or groups
which own it have the right to
run it themselves or to delegate
that responsibility to a group of
administrators. Thus all that business at St. John’s about the
faculty having a “right” to this
and the students having a “right”
to that is so much hogwash.
Faculty and students have no
such rights, but only those privileges granted to them by the
Vincentians or their appointed
administrators.

In keeping with the general
theme of this newspaper thus far
expressed this summer, I shall
treat you to my ideas about the
university—universities in general and this university in particular. In contrast to those opinions
already proffered, however, I
shall not throw around scattered
and unbased views on whatever
happens to be flowing through
my stream of consciousness at
the moment. Rather, I shall stick
to my form and attempt to deal
with the subject logically and

SNCC’s political activity will destroy the oppressive white power
structure and make possible the
effective control of area resources
by particular communities. Political power, meaning the administration by the community of the
things which affect their lives, is
a requirement of human emancipation.

or that the U.S. get out of Vietnam.

What then are the legitimate
channels of expression open to
students? Firstly, they can act
in their capacity as citizens to
change the policy of Albany in
hopes of changing the policy of
S.U.N.Y.A.B.’s administ ration.
Secondly, they can go directly to
Albany or Hayes Hall, explain
that the university was created
to benefit those having experi
ence with it, that in their capacity
as students they have had special
opportunity to witness the effects
of certain policies, and explain
how a change in those policies
might benefit all concerned. Such
an approach is bound to evoke a
more favorable response than
marching around brandishing a
sign “demanding" the change.
Students should realize that it is
in their own interest to work with
authority instead of trying to
buck it.
There are many changes that
could be made in this university
to further the educational experience. I shall devote a good
deal of column space this sum
mer to the expression of opinions I hold regarding those changes, but always in the form of
persuasion, not of an ultimatum

Harrison Presents
'Lecture on Nothing'
Paul Carter-Harrison, artist-inresidence, will present Mac Hammond reading John Cage’s “Lec-

true on Nothing” today at 3;30
p.m. in the Conference Theatre
of Norton Union.

According to Mr. Harrison, “the
lecture shows an attitude toward
modern music and also possesses
broad references to modern theatre and poetry. It is a must for
persons wanting to be informed
on contemporary stage, music,
and poetry."
Mr. Harrison, who lives in Amsterdam, Holland, will direct two
of his own one-act plays, Pavana
for a Daad-Pan Minstrel and Top
Hat, on July 29, 30, 31 and August 5, 6, and 7.

Barth Reading

John Barth, Professor of English here, will give a prose reading on July 13 in 147 Diefendorf
Hall at 1:30 p.m.
Mr. Barth, whose work has appeared in Esquire, Tha Kanyon
Raviaw, and Southwest Raviaw,
is best known for his novels, Tha
End of tha Road and Tha SotWaad Factor. Last April, Mr.
Barth received a grant from the

Paul Cartar-Harrison (laft) and Mac Hammond (right)
National Institute of Arts and
Letters and he recently was honored with a citation from Brandeis University at its 19th Creative-Arts Awards Presentation.
HELP WANTED

Can you spare 5 minutes a day
to help a child? We need help
in a home physical therapy program for our son. Volunteers:
please call Mr. or Mrs. Stephen
Gessner, 100 Brauncroft Lane,
Snyder, N. Y„ TF 9-1783.

Game Night
Mr. J. C. Paffie, Norton Hall
Recreation Director, reminds all
students that the recreational
facilities will be “free” this Wednesday, July 13, from 6-9 p.m.
The air-conditioned recreation
area has table tennis, billiards,
and bowling facilities. Take ad
vantage of this free offer to re
lax a bit before the First Sum
mer Sessions finals.

�Friday, July 8, 1966

PACK FIVE

SPECTRUM

Second in a

THE POTENTIALS OF BIGNESS
Harrell
Recommendations

might be achieved and I’m sure
there are many more:

EDITOR’S NOTE: The following article by Mr. Bill Harrell,
Lecturer in Sociology, appeared last fall in the Spectrum as “Metaphysical Pathos and Bureaucracy in the American University." It is
reprinted here in part in order to establish a context within which to
place the recommendations subsequently proposed by Mr. Harrell.
This article is the second in a series on University education
which the Spectrum hopes will become the dialogue so desperately
needed on this campus. Any student and faculty or staff member is
invited to contribute to this dialogue in the form of letters, articles,

or columns.
We usually

assume that large
classes make it impossible for
there to be any effective communication and exchange of
ideas between student and teacher and student and student. But
this is an assumption and despite
some inconclusive experimentation, no one has really examined
the alternate possibility that large
classes could be just as rich and
exciting or even more exciting
small ones. It may well be
when a large class is dull
pointless we blame it on

than
that
and
class
have

size when in fact it may
the same cause as dull and
pointless small classes, that is,
a bored distracted instructor and
ill-motivated students in the glassy-eyed stupor that can best be
described as grade-terror.
We must confront this problem
of large numbers because in the
university at least, there is not
likely to be any real alternative.
The usual response is, “less bureaucracy” which translates into
small numbers. This assumes that
through the more intelligent use
of teachers and an immense increase in their numbers we can
solve the problem by decreasing
the size of classes. However, that
may solve only one problem, the
immediate relationship between
teacher and student. It doesn’t
solve the problem of communication and action arising between
students outside of class, between
students in general and the faculty in general, between faculty
and faculty, and faculty, student
and administration. In fact, large
numbers of small classes may
well promote the already marked
trend

toward insularity

among

the various academic disciplines.
Another common response to
the problem of large numbers is
to cut back student enrollment
by “raising standards.” This has
the obvious danger in our society
of creating an academic elite, but
it also completely ignores the
essential meaning of liberal education. If it is reasonable to define the goals of liberal education
as the expansion of human consciousness and sensitivity in the
service of a more fulfilling and
humane life, then I cannot see
how it is possible to rationalize
the exclusion of any person from
higher education. My personal
view is that there shoulo be no
standards (which would include
the abolishing of financial standards) for admission to the University but all who want to attend
and can somehow stumble onto

campus should be welcomed and
even encouraged to enter those
holy grounds. Of course, this
would mean even larger numbers
—well, so be it. We can afford it
and if we do not despair prematurely, I think we can find
ways to make it work.
We must make it work, for
more than the problem of meaningful and quality education is at
issue here. The stakes are no less
than the possibility of creating
the conditions for a meaningful
life for all men, an unalienated
human existence in a really democratic society. If we cannot resolve the problem of number and

complexity within the academic
setting, how can we expect to do
so in the larger society? If a
teacher and 500 students cannot
fruitfully join the crucial ideas

....

RECOMMENDATIONS

1. All University areas which are

related to the private and social
life of students should be completely controlled and administered by the students. E.g., students should run their own dormitories and cafeterias where they
determine the operating rules
such as curfews, visitation rights,
etc.
2. Students

should have voting
academ-

representatives on every

The details of the organization
of this type of problem-oriented
class may be different, of course,
and there are many more details
which must be considered and
worked out. My objective here is
simply to present the general
ideas for such a course;

If students are expected to participate in the independent intellectual pursuits of their clubs
and the independent scholarship
required by the problem course,
they must not only have facilities but time. Consequently, it

experiment, not children playing democracy, but an
experiment with the total University as a potential community,
involving the entire University
population as equals, where the
stakes are high and the decisions

to cut back
the present formal degree requirements. Assuming that four
years would remain as the sacred
time span required to get a B.A.
or B.S. degree, I would make
the following recommendations:
B.A. or B.S, degree: 72 hours
(128 at present)
This would break down to approximately nine hours per sewould be necessary

crucial. What could be learned
in this environment and about
this environment may well be
the greatest contribution the University can make to mankind.
I would like to make some specific recommendations . . . which
fall short of the spirit of the
essay but may be considered as
steps in that direction. Some may
find merit in the recommendations even though they don’t
share the underlying assumptions
about the nature of a “good

mester.
6 hours of core courses taught
more or less as at present
3 hours of “problem' courses

university.” I am especially con-

the romantic movement, Homer
chose realistic views from everyday life and painted directly
from nature.
The collection includes both

figurative painting, frequently
depicting women and children,
and sea, hunting and fishing
scenes.

of Homer’s oils
appeared dark and somber, his
watercolors are light, luminous
and reflect the skill acquired
during a long career as an illusWhile

trator.

many

The “factions” may also seek
expert advice and call in other
faculty members or qualified students. These conditions create a

academic materials but the development and communication of
ideas in a complex social situation.

artificial

and America were dominated by

The class would meet once a
week for two or three hours for
about six to nine weeks. At this
time the problem would be debated. The instructor would function principally as a moderator
during the class. He would encourage the development of “factions” or points of view around
the issue. The instructor and
perhaps any graduate assistants
he may have, will act as advisors
to the various “factions.” The
“factions” should be provided
with meeting rooms where they
could discuss their point of view
and prepare their arguments.
They should also have access to
mimeograph machines, clerical
help and other equipment necessary for them to develop and
present their argument in and
out of class. One would expect
the debate to take place not only
in the class between “factions”
but also in print and within the
meetings of the “factions.”

participate in small seminar type
groups (“factions”), large complex groups (“the class”), and
also establish contact with various experts in the various disciplines. They also will be engaged in developing and using
their writing skills. The learning
situation will include not only

and organization are explored
and experimented with. Not an

cerned with the tendency of
academicians to yearn for the
small university and small class

inappropriate to any particular
type of problem or issue.

situation in which students may

and issues of our time, how can
we ever expect the larger society
to join the issues of the day in
a democratic fashion and proceed
toward thoughtful and humane
action? No matter how bleak the
prospects or how deeply imbedded our metaphysical pathos we
simply most face and resolve
those problems.
Under the circumstances, it
seems to me that the University
should be more than a place
where ideas and facts are transmitted, discovered and explored
within the traditional framework
of the various academic disciplines. The University should
also be an experimental community, a microcosm of the larger
society where the link between
facts, ideas, values, skills, action

Homer Watercolor Exhibit
At Albright-Knox Gallery
An exhibition of watercolors by
Winslow Homer, the eminent
19th century artist, will open
July 7 at the Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo.
The collection of about 50
works, borrowed from museums
and private collections, will remain on view through August 28.
Director Gordon M. Smith said
“Homer’s work remains vital and
colorful today” and his “important role in our art history has
long been assured.”
At a time when both Europe

instead of attempting some imagi n a t i v e experimentation with
large classes

A. More money should be budgeted for student controlled organizations, e.g., sociology club,
political science club, math club,
convocations committee, etc. The
sociology club has in the past
two years invited a number of
outstanding speakers to the campus. This semester they organized a series of talks on automation
and for next year they have projected a series of speakers who
will address themselves to the
principle issues discussed by
Denis de Rougemont in Lav* in
the Western World. This will involve medieval historians, psychologists, sociologists, artists
and critics and promises to be a
very exciting program.
The student members of the
sociology club also publish a journal, The Catalyst, which they feel
is in the tradition of law journals. That is, a scholarly publication under the editorship and
control of students. The Catalyst
has been edited by a committee
of graduate and undergraduate
students and is an exciting and

al issue. I see no reason why the
following technique should be

9 hours per semester

Large classes may possess potential for quality education
ic policy-making body at all levels of the University.

3. The students should participate
in the determination of curriculum, academic standards, etc.

However, since this function is

necessarily circumscribed by levels of expertise in the various
disciplines, the student will tend
to take only a marginal role. I

would suggest then that the advice of experts predominate
where it is most relevant. Mainly
this would involve the determination of the basic requirements
for a major. As we move away
from the major, the control of
academic life should fall more
and more in the hands of the
students or the students and faculty in cooperation.
I see two ways in which this

educational experience for them.
All of this has been done with
very limited financial resources.
There is no reason why other
clubs in other academic disciplines cannot do the same (as
many of them do, of course) but
they need larger budgets.
SUNY-B already has a sound
foundation for this type of activity, the program simply needs to
be improved and expanded.
B. Courses organized around
“problems.” This would involve
large sections from two to fivehundred students, or even more,
who would address themselves to
one central problem. The problem may involve an immediate
social issue or it may be a fundamental, time-honored academic
problem, say, some epistomologic-

If the 72 hour requirement
seems too great a departure from
the present requirement, each
distinct problem section lasting
semester could carry three
hours of credit, thus creating a
twelve hour semester load and a
96 hour degree requirement.
A degree plan might look
something like this:
21 hours major core curriculum
12 hours major problem courses

33 hours
12 hours minor field core
curriculum
6 hours minor field problem
courses
18 hours
21 hours core curriculum and
problem courses, basic and
distribution requirements.

72 TOTAL.

�muffi Warty
As I sit down to write my first
review for the Spectrum, I wonder how my views and criticisms
on films will fare to the “Intellectual classical” columns of the
Spectrum's other two reviewers.
My job this week is tough because
I ran into a problem. My friends
kept yelling at me to sound intellectual, so I decided to see a
typical, terrible, American type
film and pan it in the usual way
that Sight and Sound does.

Walking to my car, I was attracted to the beautiful blinking
Igihts of the “Amherst,” where
it was told that 1 could relax in
a new smoking section, in cool
comfort, and enjoy a beautiful
comedy. With all this behind me
I was ready to blast at the Norman Jewison production of The
Russians ars Coming / The Russians aro Coming.
To add to my feeling of Judas,
the manager told me he would
not give me a press book of the
film, and if I really was a reviewer to kindly comb back my
hair and look in the paper for
the names of the performers involved. Burning mad, I took my
position in a used trolley seat,
and the curtain opened. Then
came the problem—I liked it!!
How could a reviewer for the
Spectrum ever think anything
like this? Read on, my friends.
Anytime that this reviewer is

not bored with a film it immediately reaches

the “good” position on my hit parade. This is a
very difficult position to reach,
because even true art films that
I thought were excellent and
masterpieces sometimes reel off
slowly (e.g., Godard’s Alphaville).
From the opening Russian line
of T.R.A.C. to the closing scene,
this two hour collection of Hollywood corn was at times fresh,
exciting, and it contained some
of the funniest sight gags seen
on the screen in a long time. The
direction of Jewison builds up
each small laugh into a bellywhopper by slowly revealing each
joke. The perfect timing makes
sometimes old gags into really
beautiful pieces of film.
The small incident of a Russian submarine going aground in
New England almost leads to
W.W. 3. Tense? You bet! Jewison
the farce into more serious water.
A collection of middle class writers, telephone operators, and an
American Legion armed division
are left to deal with the Russian
crew and your imagination can
tell you that in this part this situation can become mighty serious. Could a small incident of a
Russian submarine going aground
really lead to W.W. 3? How does
the American public really react
to war, patriotism, and humanitarianism? The answer can be
found in your nearest holster.
The film under Jewison makes
these transitions from comedy
into melodrama well despite the
acting of Jonathan Winters, Carl
Reiner (playing a typical American typical), and Eva Marie Saint
who should have stayed in Israel.
Last week at the Circle Art I
fell in love with Red Dust, a
Harlow-Gable film, because of its
beautiful ending. Endings are important parts of film, yet very
few films have endings that fit
their story line, mood, or pace.
A young musician friend of mine
said that the film would have
been better if it had no ending
at all and merely stopped after
90 minutes. Tha Russians Are
Coming had an ending which
took it out of Tha Mousa That
Roared category and joined it to
the ranks of Gene Autry, Batman,
and even Doris Day. READY?
American girl tells Russian boy
someday people can love

that

Friday, July 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

Reproductions Off
American Painting
In Norton Union

Sadoff

each other no matter what nation they come from. Mean Russian captain, Theodore Bikel, decides not to destroy New England
because a boy falls from a church,
and the rescue shows that people
can work together. Eva Marie
Saint in Doris Day soft focus tells
Bike) that the town now likes the
Russians more than the American
Legion and gives the sub an
escort to prove it. People cheer
wildly as Russians and Americans
forget the past and dance in the

streets.
I, myself, wish something like
this could happen, but don’t think
it could be achieved in ten minutes as happened in the film.
Result: The film takes on Ed
Hearlihy characteristics.
The motion picture at this point
is kept from disaster by Alan
Arken, who, as a Russian officer,
creates the only character to
whom real emotions can be attached. I think that everyone I
spoke to who saw the film identified with him. In giving his performance, Arkin brings out the
real meaning of the film—there
are other “human beings in the
world beside those in the Western Hemisphere. (As I reread,
even this sounds Commie).
The film is a funny summer
treat that could have been a lot

funnier if William Rose had devised an ending that was more
suited to the middle. You won’t
die laughing as the advertisements claim, but the trip to the
air-conditioned Amherst or Cinema is well worth taking. Judging from the size of the crowds,
you will have many weeks to act
on my advice.
I do not feel so bad giving
this piece of corn a fair review
when I look back and see that
Inside Daisy Clover and Harper
drew the same on these pages.
Because of reviews printed here
I saw I. D. C. and was thankful
I had the experience of seeing
something this terrible so I could
set up new standards in film evaluation. Note; to all film critics
—veterans and amateurs—do not
criticize what you have not yet
seen.

I would like to bring your attention to Bergman’s Night Is My
Future and The Devil's Wanton
that will play at the Conference
Theater next week. I only saw
one—Night Is My Future. It is
not a perfect film but Interesting
in studying the style of Bergman,
his relationship to fate and also
to the special effects department.
The film tells the story of how
in one instant of time a man’s
life can be changed. A boy is
shot while trying to save a dog
from a military shooting range,
and blindness is the result. The
way it affects him, and those
he loves makes an interesting
story, but Bergman’s magic of
the camera in displaying human
emotions makes this a film that
should be seen.
The co-feature Devil's Wanton
was banned in New York State
at one time because it deals with
abortion, and a famous Bergman
"dream” concerning this in the
film must have offended a police
widow.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

Parlntri’ Pnii,

J)nc.

-Mfotl Smili Prmlinf
&amp;

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

The development of American
painting from its colonial beginnings to the present day is surveyed in an exhibition of SO color
reproductions entitled “Highlights
of American Painting,” which
opened at Norton Union on June
20 and will continue through August 25. Chosen by the American
Federation of Arts from prints
published by the New York
Graphic Society, the exhibition is
considered an outstanding historical presentation of art in the
“Highlights of
United States.
American Painting” is currently
touring museums and art institutions across the country under
the auspices of AFA.

Tht BIum Project in Concert

A Review

THE BLUES PROJECT
By MARK SCHILLER

The Blues Project, it appears,
is the contemporary incarnation
of Dionysius. This group was
able to take an overflow crowd
“all the way” with them through
frenzied hard rock and bring
them down screaming for more.
This success, I think, is due to
three talents.

First, they are the most capable
musicians to have appeared on
the white rock 'n roll scene,
Danny Kolb is unmatched on
lead guitar and A1 Kooper likewise on organ. This tremendous
ability enables them to transcend
a number of the basic physiological barriers which bar many
groups from getting down to the
real nitty-gritty of rhythm and
blues. Second, they play as a
unit. They’re able to feel each
other out (work within each
other) and finally come to the
same conclusion. Third, they are
tremendously versatile. In addition to their standard instruments,
they are able to play harmonica,

flute, piano, and sitar and vary
from strict rhythm and blues to
folk, folk-rock, straight blues, and
jazz.

The concert itself resembled a
sexual act. The Blues Project
ejaculating tremendous amounts
of energy and the audience responding by giving themselves up
to the music. Significant orgasms
came during “Jelly Jelly," “Rolling Stone,” “Goin’ Down Louisiana,” “Smoke and Fire,” “Shake
Me, Wake Me,” and “HooehyCoochy Man.” These hard rhythm
and blues coupled with delicate
songs such as “Steve’s Song,”
“Catch the Wind,” and “Flute
Thing” made the catharsis complete.

The Blues Project, in my mind,
is presently the finest white
group in rock ’n roll. During the
summer they may be seen at the
Cafe Au Go Go and various concerts around New York. A fortyfive of “Smoke and Fire” is just
about to be released which should
bring them national recognition
and it is hoped back to Buffalo.

Now Earn

EXTRA CASH
Selling Ads for

The SPECTRUM
Work on the

SPECTRUM
Photography Staff
with full use of Darkroom
Facilities and Equipment

Inquire Room 355

Norton

or

Call

831-3610

The earliest work reproduced
in the exhibition is a portrait by
an anonymous artist (c.1674), entitled “Mrs. Mary Freake and
Baby Mary,” one of the acknowledged masterpieces in colonial
art. 18th century portraiture reflects the link established between the traditions of Europe
and artists of the new land.
Copley’s “Mrs. John Bacon”
(1771), Earl’s “William Carpenter” (1779), and Stuart’s wellknown “George Washington”
(1795) are among the examples
here that reveal the technical
competence achieved by American painters in the latter years
of our colonial era.

The growing complexity of the
19th century is seen in such diverse examples as Bingham’s “Fur
Traders Descending the Missouri”
(1847), Cassatt’s “La Loge” (1882),
and Harnett’s “Music and Literature” (1878). Sargent, Ryder,
Whistler, Inness, Homer, and Eakins were among other artists of
the period whose work is reproduced.
Twentieth century examples include: “Both Members of This
Club” (1909), by Bellows; “Maine
Island” (1922), by Marin; “Promenade" (1928), by Burchfield;
“Flour Mill Abstraction” (1938),
by Dove; “Wild Roses” (1942), by
Hartley; and “Number 27” (1950),
by Jackson Pollock. Jack Levine’s
“Maimonides,” painted in 1952,
is the latest work reproduced in
the show.

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT

SUMMER

■/

ED|TION

VOLUME 16

.

LOCKWOOD

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 1,

The first of the 15 three-day
Freshman Planning Conferences
scheduled for this summer began
last Monday.

Excerpts reprinted by permis-

The purpose of the conferences,

according to University College

1966.

Advisement

Buchanan, the

Buchanan

interviewed

ments as these:

“Pot is not nearly so severe as
alcohol.”
“It’s a pleasurable effect.”
“You have complete physical

control.”

Freshman About To

By JOANN LEEGANT
The Human Relations Workshop, a three week session of
lecture-discussions focused on the
solution of inter-group problems
in the Buffalo area, began on
June 27 and will continue until
July 15.
The workshop is run in conjunction with the National Conference of Christians and Jews.
According to Workshop Director
Dr. Frank P. Besag, the participants will consider problems
such as the racial situation in
Buffalo, ethnic prejudice, poverty,
prejudice and employment, crime,
particularly civil disobedience,
and defacto segregation.
Dr. Besag explained that this
year the “entire focus and scope”
of the workshop has been
changed. In the past, participants
were teachers. Among this year’s

Mr. Frye’s objections kept most
of this out of the record.

An Interview:

grand jury,

“I’m afraid I can’t answer beit would violate a confidence. I promised I would do
everything possible to keep the
source confidential.”
Miss Buchanan has received
considerable editorial support for
her position. The Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association resolved last weekend that she had
“responded in the highest traditions of her profession.”
The publishers commended her
for her “fortitude, insight and
contribution to journalism by her
endeavors which exposed, interpreted and gave greater public
understanding to an issue of the
cause

news.”
. . .
She doubts she will bo to
jail. She intends to appeal the
ruling if it goes against her and
if she loses the appeal she then

can purge herself of contempt

by giving the names.

BULLETIN
June

28—The United Press
International has reported that
Miss Buchanan has been found
guilty of contempt of court. Imposition of the fine has been
withheld pending an appeal.

in Her Education

Human Relations Workshop Focuses
On Inter-Group Problems in Buffalo

“You don’t lose yourself.”
Mr, Frye (District Attorney
William F. Frye—ed.) subpoenaed
four student editors of The
Emerald June 1 to appear before
the grand jury . . . The three
associates of Miss Buchanan were
excused when they said they did
not know the identity of her
sources. Miss Buchanan answered
questions except those bearing on
the identity of the marijuana
users. She was ordered by the
court to answer all questions.,and
was summoned today (June 27—
ed.) before Judge Edward Leavy
in Circuit Court to show why
she should not be punished for
contempt.
Judge Leavy refused a request
for a jury trial. Arthur Johnson,
Miss Buchanan’s lawyer tried to
bring in evidence that newspapers had a tradition of providing anonimity for sources, but
“The sole issue is whether this
witness declined to answer questions she was directed by the
court to answer,” said Mr. Frye.
The grand jury transcript
showed Miss Buchanan telling the

Director

William

Fritton, is twofold. The University wants to provide a smooth
transition stage for freshmen

managing editor of The Emerald
. . . faces a fine of $300 and six
months in jail.

Miss

NO. 50

By SHELDON BERGMAN

sion of the New York Times Co.

seven persons last May 22, who
in her article, published May 24,
defended the use of marijuana.
Before they talked to her, the
seven insisted that she promise
to preserve their anonimity.
She quoted them in such state-

m

First Group Toured
Last Monday

The following

Buchanan, who has been tried lor
contempt of court for refusing to
disclose the names of students she
intereviewed for a story on the
use of marijuana on the University
of Oregon campus.

Miss (Annette)

D

Fresh Conferences
Seek to Provide
Smooth Transition

Special to the New York Times
describes the case of Miss Annette

©

/c

)'

University Editor
Appeals Verdict;
Anonymity Is Still
To Be Preserved
Editor’s Note:

exhibit

'm

m T~-

participants are a manager from
New York Telephone, a member
of the Human Relations Commission, a minister, and a member of the police force.
The sixteen participants in the
workshop were chosen by interview of a limited group, according to Dr. Besag. To qualify as a
participant, Dr. Besag said, the
applicant had to “have a special
interest in or be in a position
to deal with” the problems discussed. He asserted that the participants should be “part of the
power-structure."

Each session will begin with a
lecture. Most of the emphasis,
explained Dr. Besag, will be on
group discussion and means of
“arriving at action steps.” After
the three week Workshop, the
participants will hold additional

meetings on a less frequent basis.
Earlier this week, Dr. M. K.
Opler
discussed "History of
Ethnic
Groups-Pre-American-Amenean.” Charles Brewer of
CORE and Donald Lee of the
NAACP spoke on the “Negro
Leader Point of View.” This morning the group took individual
field trips into slum areas.
Next week’s session will begin
with the discussion of employment problems and hiring prac-

between high school and college
and to orient freshmen to college
living. Since there are only 100
to 150 freshmen here at a time,
the Advisement Office is able to
give a considerable amount of
attention to each student's needs.
The University placement tests,
formerly given on the day after
arrival, are now taken the same
afternoon the student arrives.
The .hectic last day registration
will thus become a thing of the
past, as advisement can now be
spread over two days. Mr. Fritton feels that this is the major
improvement of this year’s conferences over the previous ones.
A new set of tests is being
given to incoming freshmen besides the placement tests. This is
a group of pschychological and
aptitude tests which are given
on the second and third days of

the conference. The results from
these tests will be used by the
advisors to guide the student
later in his academic career.

tices, The remainder of the week
will be devoted to crime, including a discussion of the 1963
Rochester riot.

Another purpose of the conferences, besides advisements and
pre-registration, is the election
of representatives to the FreshThe final week the group will men Council. Each planning constudy segregation and prejudice.
ference will elect a representaDr. Besag will lecture on "The
to the Council on the third
Nature of Political Competence tive
and Power” and “The Nature of day of the conference. Each
candidate must have a petition
Prejudice.”
supporting him signed by ten
members of the conference and
must give a five-minute speech.
The student with the greatest
number of votes is the winner.
According to Associate Coordinatcr of Student Activities Mr.
Dallas Garber, "The Planning
Conference Groups produce a
stronger unity than the Freshman
sity owned the Audubon golf
course on Maple Road, which is Conference Hours could. We feel
that elections in the Conference
now operated by the Town of
Amherst. Mr. Bacon explained groups will make the students
that conditions on the F.S.A. land identify
more closely with their
would lead to a much more sucrepresentatives."
cessful course.
The Town of Amherst
The final function of the planmade tentative plans for a canal,
ning conference is to orient the
marina, and recreational area on
and adjacent to the F.S.A. land.
student to campus living. To d*
Land for the canal, which would this both resident and
commuted
connect Ellicott and Tonawanda
freshmen live in the dorms durpurchased
from
Creeks, would be
ing the conference. Panel discusthe F.S.A. by the town. Mr,
sions with student advisers let
Bacon said ihat these plans would
be compatible with a golf course. the students communicate with
Other suggestions for the use
people who have
of the land, which is flat and
coped
with university liviaA
mostly treeless, include a hockey
rink, camping site, riding stables There are also meetings wftt
and a large hall for dances. Mr.
resident adivsers who exptaqt
Bacon emphasized that the studorm rules and procedures. TM
dent committee would have a pri
social aspect of the University Ip
mary voice in the plans, and
handled by the Norton staff o&gt;
hoped that students would take
the second night. They have planan interest.
As yet, no polls have been ned movies, picnics, and tours *0
taken to determine student and
give the freshmen a taste of the
faculty preferences for the land
"college scene.’’
development.

Use of FSA Land Awaits Student Voice;
Would Make Very Good Golf Course'
By ELLEN CARDONE

500-acre plot of
owned land near the
new campus "would make a very
good golf course,” according to
Mr. Paul Bacon, Assistant VicePresident for Financial Affairs.
The land, located about 3 miles
from the new campus site, was
acqiured in 1964 by the F.S.A.
while plans for the campus were
being made. It was set aside for
“recreational purposes” since the
State University cannot buy recreational land.
The F.S.A., as a membership
corporation affiliated with the
University, is permitted to do
Part of the

F.S.A,

-

so.
Bought at $1,500 an acre, the
value of the land has since
“doubled,” according to Mr.
Bacon. The purchase was made
with funds from the “facultystudent fee,” the portion of the
general F.S.A. fee that is earmarked for long-range development.
In recent years this part of the
fee has been $26 yearly for full-

Beginning
time day students.
next year, a student-faculty SubBoard will set the fee, subject
to approval by the F.S.A. Board

of Directors.

The

amount will

depend on plans for the land’s
development.

A student committee to receive
and review suggestions for the
use of the land will be formed
in the fall by Student Association President Clinton Deveaux.
Mr. Bacon cited the depth of
topsoil and the ample water
supply as factors favoring a golf
course. He stated that an "18hole championship course” would
take up less than half the land.
Development of such a course
would cost about $15,000 per
hole, he estimated.
The course could be open to
the public or limited to the Uni-

versity community, Mr. Bacon explained. Fee structures would be
determined by the student-faculty Sub-Board. Once established,
the course would porbably be
self-maintaining.
In pre-merger days the Univer-

1

,

I

�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

(Comment.

.

THE PEOPLE

.

THE TASK FARCE
On May 8 President Furnas convened a
special meeting of an Ad Hoc Committee
which recognized “legitimate concerns felt
by students and faculty in the University
with respect to their participation in the
formulation of academic policy” and further
of openrecognized “the immediate need
ing and maintaining a dialogue among students, faculty, and administrative groups.”
...

The Ad Hoc Committee then recommended “that the President name a Special Task
Force Committee whose mandate shall be
(1) to inquire into and make proposals with
respect to establishing an open and continual
dialogue among such groups; and (2) to make
such proposals as they deem appropriate regarding organizational means for participation by these groups in the formulation of
educational policy in the University.”

Friday, July 1, 1966

By

The

articles

FRANK KLINGER

forthcoming

in

Ad Hoc Committee. The whole affair could this space will be written by rephardly inspire the confidence of the students. resentatives of a group known as
They were left, in effect, at the mercy; of an “The People” and the opinions
administrative channel.
expressed may sometimes repreIt has become clear that the establish-

ment of the Task Force was more an attempt
to forestall direct student action than to

reorganize the University’s structure. The
immediate need for “establishing an open
and continual dialogue” has been belied by
unnecessary delay and the exclusion of the
public from the Task Force Committee
meetings.
It has taken the Task Force forty-six days

to call its first meeting, a fact hardly indica-

sent a different shade of the

spec-

trum than does our fine student

newspaper.
“The People” was formed as a
counterbalance for that other
campus group which bears the
very descriptive title of The
Movement. Specifically, as a result of threats, pressures, intimidation, sit-ins, etc by The Movement, the Administration had
agreed to reconsider its decision
to hold the Selective Service
Exam on campus. (In fact, a highranking administrator informed
one of our members that unless
counteraction were taken, the
test would probably be removed).

tive of the urgency which the Ad Hoc Committee recognized. Furthermore, the exclusion of the public from Task Force meetings
can hardly be construed as a sincere effort
The original suspicions of the students at creating an atmosphere in which dialogue
regarding the Task Force Committee were may take place on this campus.
grounded both on the nature of the proceedThe Task Force has been, from its incepIt was at this point that “The
ings and the administrative cant it produced. tion. a Task Farce. No doubt sincere indiwas formed by a disThe Movement, the group whose pressure viduals sit on the Committee, but their in- People”
tinguished Professor of Philosomade the meeting imperative, was neither fluence seems to droop in the descendency. phy, the President of YAF, two
invited nor recognized. The Ad Hoc CommitThe Task Force, were it sincere in its ob- patriotic officers of ROTC, and
tee’s structure also proved to be a closed jectives, would not need to wait for consulta- Yours Truly. One of our main
thousands
system of administrative “legitimate chantion with President-e 1 e c t Myerson while concerns was that the voluntarily
of students who had
nels”: the President convened an Ad Hoc President Furnas tours the world. If the signed
up to take this test would
Committee which recommended to the PresTask Force is so hamstrung that it cannot have been prevented from doing
ident that a Task Force Committee be estabmove without the blessings of the President, so had the test been removed
lished which would make proposals to the then it only adds further weight to The and might then have been draftPresident. Furthermore, of the original Task Movement’s contention that this University ed.
Force, 100% of its members also sat on the requires a radical overhaul.
Now, some members of The
Movement may protest

Internal Security Subcommittee Charges
Communists Have Left Brand on Rallies'
The
WASHINGTON (CPS)
Senate Internal Security Subcommittee charged last week that
Communists have played a key
role in organizing campus demonstrations against the war in Viet—

nam.

“The Communist Party, U.S.A.,
brand may be found upon every
phase of the rallies," the subcommittee said in a report on
hearings held 13 months ago,
“from planning to the final effort
to proselytize the young people.”
Seventy-eight pages of previously secret testimony, made public

with the report, dealt with the
Free Speech Movement at the
University of California, and with
the war protests there and at the
University of Wisconsin.
The subcommittee inquiry also
covered the WEB. DuBois Clubs
and the report said there is “an

THE

official link of the Communist
Party through DuBois Clubs, with
campus activities directed against
policies of the country with respect to Vietnam.”
The hearings were held May 17
18, 1965, amid demonstrations on campuses around the

and

country.

“These demonstrations seemed,
spontaneous at first,” the report
said. “But a pattern emerged, oh
campus after campus, which made
it unmistakably clear that the
Communist Party, U.S.A., and its
front organizations were playing
a key role in organizing them.”
“It became increasingly evident that the Communist party
m both fomenting and exploiting
campus unrest was laying the
groundwork for a concerted drive
to recruit youth to its cause.

SPECTRUM

and if their aim is not to sabotage the Selective Service System, then I submit that it is with
The People that these individuals belong. It was we The People
“A traditional tool of the Com(pardon the cliche) who sent a
munists is infiltration,” the repetition to President Furnas askport continued, “and it was used
ing that a referendum on the
issue be presented to the stuto the hilt on campus after campus. Student body grievances dents—a suggestion never contained in The Movement’s ultiwere either fraudulent, created,
matums. I won’t even go into
stimulated, or exaggerated as a some of the statements made by
catalytic means of setting off mob The Movement leaders, such as
the professor who suggested that
explosions.
even if the majority wants the
“Once aroused,” the report test on campus, those who don’t
want it have a right to get it
said, “students’ energies were removed.
channeled and directed by proThe draft battle was fought and
fessionals and their disciples into
won and I think it’s a fair quesforums, rallies, protests, resolution now to ask “What else do
tions, defiance of law, and outThe People stand for?” First and
and-out law violations.”
foremost, we believe that when
feasible, the Administration
The newly-published testimony ought to allow the students to
was that of Charles E. Moore, decide in the form of a referendum those issues which are of a
representing the International Asvital concern to them—providing
sociation of Chiefs of Police, and that the
results of the referenRobert Siegrist, a radio commendum do not violate Federal or
tator for WKOW in Madison, local law.
Wis. Their testimony named 28
I do not for one minute accept
people in connection with demthe garbage put forth by The
onstrations on the two campuses. Movement about “University Autonomy.” (I’m speaking here with

The Murder

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

STEPHEN A. CRAFTS

In a decision as surprising as

BUSINESS MANAGER

SHELDON BERGMAN

it is inhuman, Santa Barbara,
California, Municipal Court Judge
Frank P. Kearney ordered Mrs.
Nancy Hernandez, 21, a mother
of two small children, sterilized
as a condition of probation. Mrs.
Hernandez chose to go to jail
rather than undergo sterilization
surgery. Judge Kearney ordered
Mrs. Hernandez sterilized after
she was convicted of the misdemeanor charge of being in a
place where marijuana was in
use. arguing, "It seemed to me
she should not have more children because of her propensity to
live an immoral life."
There is grave danger in sterilization by judicial order.

EDITORIAL BOARD

ELLEN CARDONE
ALICE EDELMAN
JOCELYN HAILPERN

JOANNE LEEGANT
MARTY SADOFF

BILL SHERMAN

CARLA HARRISON
GINGER HOLCOMBE
FIRST

EDITORIAL POLICY

IS

CLASS

JULIE SULLIVAN
ED SUMMER
HONOR

RATING

DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN CHIEF

that it’s

not the draft issue but that of
campus democracy which concerns them. If this be the case,

reference to some of The Movement’s leaders and not The Movement as a whole. In fact, there’s
really very little one can say
about a movement as a whole that
would be fashionable in print).
When I gaze from my window in
Tower, I fail to see any 10 foot
brick wall surrounding the campus with a sign saying, “This is
UB—Americans Keep Out”; and
God help us all if I ever do.
Morally, there is no more reason
for the University to be autonomous, than for the State of Mississippi, and, constitutionally,
there’s less. We are American
citizens and UB is as much a
part of our nation as Kleinhans,
War Memorial Auditorium,
Henry’s Hamburgers, or Marge’s
Home Improvements.

Another of our functions will
be that of education. For a start,
we know that as a result of
Movement pressure the University will not send students’ rank
and class standing to Selective
Service, all of our male students
(and probably a few females
named Bobbi or Freddy) received
cards from Admissions and Records in which the student was
allowed to indicate whether or
not he wishes his S109 form and/
or rank in class sent to Selective
Service.

Now any idiot knows that refusal to send the S109 will get
you inducted faster than you can
say Ho Chi Minh, but I wonder
how many idiots are aware of the
consequences of not sending in
rank in class? I asked that question to 3 Selective Service Boards
(including the one in Buffalo)
and they all stated that should
S.S. ask for the rank in class and
if it is not sent due to student
refusal, that student (barring
other factors) will be classified
1A and subject to the draft. I
would earnestly suggest that
those idiots who fall into this
category get themselves over to
Admissions and Records pronto,
and ask them (or it) to change
the choice.
One function which our group
will not have will be that of pure
negativism—we admit that there
is room for improvement in the
Multiversity, I for one don’t see
why Hayes Hall has to function
like it’s having an employee sit-in
every day. In fact, next week I’ll
treat you to my conception of an
ideal University.
I was thinking of doing a critique of The Movement’s first
article, but I couldn’t even discern whether they were preaching Communism, Anarchy, or Re-

action. If The Movement does
decide to phrase its gobbledygook
in a comprehensible manner, we
might devote an article to rebuttal. But on second thought—why
bother?

of Gonzago

In the first place, sterilization
orders are of very doubtful constitutionality, violating the
amendment prohibiting cruel, excessive and unusual punishments.
The amendment was added to our
Bill of Rights when it was not
uncommon for a court to order
a convict publicly flogged or to
order his ears or hand cut off.
In the present case, Mrs. Hernandez has never been convicted before, and she is now convicted of
merely being in a place where
marijuana was in use, not even
of using it herself. The punishment is, to this writer’s knowledge, unusual and excessive.
Secondly, it strikes me as particularly dangerous to give the

government the power to sterilize

those people who fail to meet
certain standards of morality because sterilization, like capital
punishment, is a permanent and
irrevocable sentence. Sterilization
also has dangerous potential political implications for minority
groups. If a new brand of McCarthyism were to arise in America, it is possible that sterilization
orders could be issued for people
who failed to hold the proper
political opinions.
Sterilization
could become a dangerous weapon
in the hands of an unscrupulous
politician ready to do anything
to advance his own career.
This columnist is not so optimistic as to say that it can’t
happen here.

�Friday, July 1, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

Education School Reorganization Under Way
A major reorganization of State
University at Buffalo’s School of

School. A newly created position
of Director of Teacher Education has also been established in
order to coordinate the pre-professional instructional programs
in teacher education,
In keeping with the practice of
most other graduate institutions,
the School, effective in September, will require that all graduate
students be formally admitted
to graduate study before they
register for classes. This includes
summer enrollees who wish to
use summer coursework toward
a graduate degree or a certification program.
In addition, graduate students
must matriculate and specify the
degree, certification or special
program for which they are applying. In the past, most have
been admitted as unclassified students with no degree objectives
in mind.
A limited number of non-matriculated students, however, may
be admitted each term, but they
must be accepted in a program
on or prior to the completion of
12 semester hours of work.

Education

and its admission
policy at the graduate level is
currently underway in order to
meet the educational needs of
Western New York and the
State, it was announced today
by Dean Robert S. Fisk.
•Beginning July 1, the School
will be segmented into eight departments. In addition, changes
in the admissions requirements
for graduate students only have
been established. This includes a
July 1 application deadline for
the Fall semester. November 1
and April 1 deadlines have also
been initiated for the Spring and
Summer semesters, respectively.
The eight departments, whose
chairman will be named shortly,
were proposed by the School’s
faculty and recently approved by
the State University. The departments will be: Counselor Education; Curriculum Development

and Instructional Media; Educational Administration; Educational Psychology; Higher Education; Instruction; Language Arts
and Elementary Education; and
Social, Philosophical and Historical Foundations.
Each department will be responsible for developing and supervising its own degree and
certification programs within the
general policy outline of the

Supplemental information such
as transcripts, test scores, etc.,
must be provided to the Office
of Admission and Records prior
to August X for admission to the
Fall semester, December 1 for the
Spring semester and May 1 for

the Summer semester (beginning
in 1967).
Once accepted into the School,
the student is classified as “matriculated” and will receive preference in registering ahead of “nonmatriculated” students, and in
registering for courses with
limited enrollments.
To encourage students to complete their programs as soon as
possible, a policy of continuous
registration has been adopted.
Each student registering for this
fall will be required to register
each subsequent fall and spring
term until his program is com-

year’s Academy-honored offering
“Through A Glass Darkly,”
weaves a strange, dream-like, tale
incorporation the idea that the
Devil rules the earth and man
continually damns himself in a
self-made hell.

Bergman, quick to use his films
to state his own spiritual and

moral beliefs, says; “All great
films should end with a great

Ingmar Bergman's

The exhibit in Lockwood Memorial Library’s main reading
room of Ernest Hemingway’s
first editions continues through
July 15.
Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)
began his writing career as a
reporter before he was eighteen.
*

•

pleted.

Studeifts not taking courses
may remain in good standing by
paying a special matriculation
fee, or by applying for and being
granted a
formal leave of

summer session degree or certification programs may be excused
from registering during the regular academic year. In these
cases, students will meet the continuous registration requirement
by registering during consecutive

American.
In 1938, Hemingway’s first
forty-nine stories were published
in collected form. Included in
this volume were several stories
now famous which had appeared

previously

ERNEST HEMINGWAY
Photo by A. E. Hotchner

summer sessions.

agonizing

His first volume of short stories,
In Our Tim*, was published in
1925, and his first novel, The
Sun Alto Rises, a picture of disillusioned American expatriates.
appeared a year later. His next

question, a

question

about this planet, about almost
every human being.”
In “The
Devil’s Wanton,” he further
states: “After life comes death.
That’s really the only thing you
need to know. Those who are
sentimental or frightened can resort to the church. And those
who are bored, tired or indifferent can commit suicide.”

volume of short stories, Man
contemporary fiction. The writWithout Woman (1927), contained
"The Killers" and “The. Undefeated," two stories which are
considered to be among the best
examples of short story writing.
The publication of A Farawall
to Arms in 1929 brought full
recognition of Hemingway as one
of the foremost writers of our
time. The first edition of this
book now on exhibit was presented by the author to James
Joyce and bears the inscription.
“To Joyce with complete admiration and much affection. Ernest

Hemingway.
Daath in tha Afternoon (1932)
was based on Hemingway’s vast
knowledge of bull fights and bull
fighters and was the first complete book on that subject by an

absence.
Students not registering or
who are not granted leaves will
be dropped from the rolls of the
school and must apply for readmission.
Students admitted to certain

Early Bergman Films in Norton Next Week:
"Night Is My Future" and "The Devil's Wanton"
Prolific film distributor Joseph
E. Levine and two-time AcademyAward winner Ingmar Bergman
are responsible for “Night Is My
Future,” an unusual dramatic
work directed by the honored
Swedish film-maker which will
be shown July 5, 6, and 7 at the
Conference Theatre. International star Mai Zetterling and Birger
Malmsten are co-starred.
Based on a famous novel by
Dagmar Edquist, “Night Is My
Future” concerns a young man
(played by Birger Malmsten, the
symbol for Bergman in his early
years of youthful despair) who is
blinded on a rifle-range during
his military service (World War
II), and wanders from one miserable occupation to another. His
sole regular companion, a destitute girl (Mai Zetterling), eventually marries him. In this film,
Bergman is dealing with the muted inferiority complex of a stricken youth in much the same way
as did author Thomas Mann treat
the same theme in his short
stories. In many ways it is obviously a reflection of Bergman’s
own adolescence, but more vitally
a product of his incessant concern with “man’s search for
knowledge in a hostile universe,”
or more precisely, in this film,
with the blind man’s desire to
be treated as an ordinary, and
not as an inferior member of

Hemingway First Editions:
Lockwood Exhibit Feature

Blues Project

only

in

The Blues Project will perform

on Wednesday, July 5 at 8 p.m.

at the Millard Fillmore Room of
Norton Union.

New York Times music critic,
Robert Shelton, has called the
Blues Project “The most incandescent group in folk-rock today.” It also plays rock and roll,
rhyhtm and blues, and some jazz.

"Tha Davit's Wanton"

society.

Also on the program will be
Bergman’s reflections on life, art,

immortality and the Devil in Joseph’ E. Levine’s new import,

“The Devil’s Wanton.”
Serving as both director and
screen writer for this Embassy
Pictures release, Bergman, who is
responsible for the Oscar-winning
“The Virgin Spring” and this

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
ONE STOP SERVICE

Two Locations:

CENTER
Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
Lanudry &amp; Drycleaning

Located

ONE DAY SERVICE

University Plaza
IF 6-4041

1

I

I

Del
Hair F.

Phone:
136-6088

3216 Mai

i

magazine

form, among them "The Snows
Of Kilimanjaro."
In 1952 Tha Old Man and tha
Sea won world acclaim, and
Hemingway received the 1953
Pulitzer Prize in fiction. In 1954
he was awarded the Nobel Prize
in literature.
Hemingway's work has had a
tremendous stylistic influence on
ings which deal with his work
already bulk much larger than
the work itself.

Main Street &amp; Thruway
1205 Niagara Falls Blvd.

�Friday, July 1, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE POUR

Creative Problem Solving Institute
Includes Seminars and Symposiums
sist of symposiums and optional

By JULIE SULLIVAN

In the field of creative problem solving and education, the
12th, annual contention of the
Creative Problem Solving Institute is currently being held on
the State University at Buffalo
campus. The conference, which
began Sunday, June 26, will continue through July 1,
Dr. Robert F. Berner, chairman
of the Institute and Dr. Sidney
J. Parnes, director of creative
education at the University have
outlined the basic program for
the Institute, which is being cosponsored by the Creative Education Foundation.

First-time enrollees in the Institute will devote the first three
days to taking the equivalent of
a semester course in the development of creative behavior. These
day-time course sessions will involve a minimum of lecturing and
a maximum of individual participation.
The evening sessions will con

seminars covering the creative
process in the arts and sciences.

Participants will devote the
fourth and fifth day to supervised
practice leading groups of students through the creative problemsolving prosess.

It is felt that through the supervised practices, enrollees will
gain an even greater grasp of
creative principles and proce-

will also become better
able to put these teachings to
good use in their own institutions
dures, and

or organizations.
The experience of the enrollees
with creative problem solving
principles ranges from complete
unfamiliarity to expertise and
many have taught courses in
creative problem solving.
Members of numerous business
firms, including Sylvania, B. F.
Goodrich, and RCA will be in
attendance. Such organizations as

the American Red Cross and
Services for the Blind will also
send representatives.

English Faculty to Treat
The Anatomy ofPaunch

'

A panel discussion, “Anatomy
cf Paunch,” will be held on July
6 at 1:30 p.m. in the Conference
Theatre of Norton Union.
Paunch is “a journal of radically romantic criticism” founded
and edited by Arthur Efron of
the English Department.
Participants in the panel discussion will include Efron, E.B.
Greenwood, Mac Hammond, and
Marvin Murdick.
E.B. Greenwood teaches at the
University of Glascow. His most

from Oxford and is currently on
the SUNYAB faculty for the summer session.
Mac Hammond is the author of
a volume of poems - The Horse
Opera and Other Poems. He is
currently an associate professor
of English at SUNYAB.
Marvin Murdick, another member of the SUNYAB faculty for
the summer session, is professor
at the University of California,
Santa Barbara. He has taught at
Temple University and Queens
College and published Jane Aus-

recent publication is Essays in
Criticism and Ncophilologus. He

ten, Character and Event in Fiction and Joseph Conrad; A Col-

received

lection of Critical Songs.

his B.A. and

B. Litt.

Among those attending from
the religious field are a Catholic
Missionary, several representatives from the Jewish Community
Center, and ministers of the
Lutheran, Baptist, Presbyterian,
and 7th Day Adventist Churches.
Participants will come from
several branches of the Armed
Forces, as well as from the
United States Forest Service and
the Department of Agriculture.
The Institute expects educators
from all levels from kindergarten
teachers to university deans and
presidents, both from secular and
parochial schools.
As many geographical locations
will be represented at the Institute as professions and levels
of experience. Converging upon
the university will be residents
from almost every state in the
union. International visitors from
Indonesia, Belgium, South Africa,
Australia, Norway, Spain, and
Canada will also be present.

The Institute leaders feel that
the geographical and professional
diversity of the enrollees will
help rather than hinder the program. Because the symposium
emphasizes a creative and imaginative approach to the solution of problems and the production of ideas, such diversity is a
desirable asset.
Although the Institute's daytime activities will be conducted
on an informal basis, evening discussions will apply creative principles to specific interest areas.
Education,
management,
engineering, personnel and training,
marketing, research, church, civic
and social service, and the health
sciences are among the fields to
be considered.

However, because the creative

approach can be applied to almost any endeavor, participants
have written to suggest other
topics for discussion. Journalism,
hotel management, the mass education of slock market

investors,
and the computer augmentation
of man’s creative problem solving
were among the proposals.
The six-day Creative Problem
Solving Institute will end Friday
when the 450 enrollees will return to their schools, businesses,
and organizations to apply the
creative principles which they
have learned to their own fields.

[Old

Post Road
Inn

LUNCHEONS
11:45 until 3:00
BUFFALO
JOSEPH

E'LEVINE

-

EXCLUSIVE RUN

I

j

presents

!

Master

th,' Worlds

Maker

Bergman

ff|

11/117

IV VI
MU 1TM Mf

1

WK"

and Second Superb Hit "The Devil's Wanton"

(Conference CJheatre

Continuous

—

Tuesday, Wadnasday, Thursday

DINNERS
5 p.m. until 10 p.m
SUPPERS
10 p.m. until 1 p.m.

j

j
i
-

jazz impressions
By RON NAPLES

Live jazz in the city of Buffalo
is considerably nil. Local jazz
fans should thank their lucky
stars for the hopefully healthy
existence of the Royal Arms
Show Bar on West Utica and Main
Streets. The circular bar, in the
center of which is located the
band stand, holds approximately
160 people. The talent which
comes in each week, through the
direct and conscientous efforts
of owner Lou Galanter, is the
tops in the field of jazz and
popular entertainment.
Mr. Galanter expressed that
the club is very responsive to
the college students of this area
and is hoping that they will take
advantage of the fine array of

talent which he slated for the
summer season. Appearing this
summer among others will be
guitarist Kenny Burrell (currently
appearing), the Ahmad Jamal
Trio, the Johnny Lytle Trio, and
the New Ives Montgomery Quintet,

featuring Wes

on

guitar,

Eldee Young on bass and cello,
and Red Holton on drums. Young
and Holt are recently deposed
members of the popular Ramsey
Lewis Trio.
Last Saturday evening we had
the pleasure of witnessing the
performance of the group headed
by jazzdom’s number one creative drummer, Art Blakey. The
group, The New Jazz Messengers
also features Chuck Mangiore on
trumpet, Chick Coreu on piano,
Reggie Johnson on the bass, and
Frank Mitchell on tenor sax.
Art Blakey is quite an individual. As the leader of the Jazz
Messengers, Blakey has helped
develop some of the jazz world’s
reading performance. He is dedicated to developing young talent.
The current group, which has
been together only months will
attest to this.
Mangoine, a Rochester native,
is 25; Coreu 24; Johnson 25; and
Mitchell 20.
“Yes sir. I’m going to stay with
the youngsters, it keeps the mind
active,” says Blakey. “We usually
keep the same group for about 2
years, then change. The reason
being, people like new faces.”
Our opinion is that in many
instances Blakey keeps a performer only until he’s ready to
make it on his own, then releases
him and replaces him with another young musician. A list of
ex-Jazz Messengers resembles a
ballot for an All-Star Jazz poll.
Names
like Clifford Brown,
Kenny Dorham, Freddie Hubbard, Donald Byrd, Lee Morgan,
Curtis Fuller, Hank Mobley,
Wayne Shorter, Benny Golson,
Horace Silver, Bobby Timmons,
Jymie Merritt and Doug Watkins,
head the list.

j

Every member of the Jazz Mesmust also be able to

sengers

write and chart music. Their
latest Limelight album, “Buttercorn Lady,” features the writing
talents
of
Chuck Mangione.
Chuck (formerly of the Jazz
Bros.) wrote (1) The title song,
which has a slight Carribbean
flavor, (2) Recuerdo, a muted
Milesish study in moods, (3) Between Races, which was written
while working for Maynard Ferguson.

Chick Coreu’s arranging talent

was heard in a composition entitled “Straight Up and Down”
as was Frank Mitchell’s on “Big

Mistake."

Many of today’s Jazz standards
were written by ex-members of
the Jazz Messengers. Among
these are Curtis Fuller’s “There
Blind Mice,” Bobby Timmon’s

“Mornin’,” Benne Colson’s “Blues
Marc h,” and Horace Silver’s
“Sister Sadie.”

We asked Mr. Blakey his philosophy concerning music. “Basically music is supposed to move
you, make you forget. I am always trying to reach the people,
after all, the’re paying your fare.
Seriously though, the people
want to ‘feel’ what you’re playing. This is why rock and roll
and folk music are so popular.

Much of rock and roll is very
good and I can’t help but to tap
my foot while it’s playing. Most
people feel this way.” We later
found out that Art will soon be
releasing an album with a rock
and roll flavor, using Grant
Green (guitar) and Don Patterson (organ).
“We play modern jazz for the
people to listen, they must listen
to understand it. We study, we
rehearse. The Jazz Messenger are
very serious about getting their
music across to you.”

At this time Blakey and the

Jazz Messengers began their first
set with “It’s You Or No One,” a

number first recorded by the
group in 1955. This number feautred some excellent work by
Coreu and Mitchell. Also in the
first set the group played the
popular “I Wish You Love,” Highlighted
by Frank
Mitchell’s
overative solo, “For Heavens
Sake,” and Coreu’s “Straight Up
and Down.” On this last one
Blakey showed his versatility as
he led the progression from “up
to down.”
The intermission following the
first set afforded us our final
opportunity to chat with the
amiable Mr. Blakey. We asked
the “dynamic drummer” what
he thought of the ‘avant garde'
school of modern jazz.
“I don’t like to hear some cat
blow for 45 minutes and neither
do most people. Most avant
garde musicians play as if there
is no one else there. They’re not
playing! They’ll realize in a year
or two that the people are not
interested and the good ones
(like John Coltrane and Ornett
Coleman) will probably settle
down and come back to us.”
Once again the genial performer left us to begin another
set, this one spotlighting the
talents of tenor man, Frank
Mitchell on “Round Midnight,”
"Between Races,” and “Big Mis
take,” and Chuck Mangione on
“Buttercorn Lady,” “If I Were A
Bell,” and “It Was A Very Good
Year.”

As Art Blakey closed out Man
gione’s beautiful solo on Frank
Sinatra’s hit, we saw an approv
ing smile light the face of the
man who calls himself “the

World’s youngest drummer.” For
Art Blakey it was one of many
very good years.

Let us be your pharmacy away from home

HIGHGATE PHARMACY
3435 BAILEY AVENUE

—

1 block from Rotary Field

WE CAN FILL YOUR HOMETOWN PRESCRIPTIONS
COMPLETE LINE OF ALMAY COSMETICS
—

—

RUSTCRAFT GREETING CARDS
Prescription and Non-Prescription Drugs

Phone; 835-1663
835-3233
Please show your Student ID Card when making purchases
—

�</text>
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                    <text>—I

SUMMER
EDITION

9MMK3

VOLUME 16

K

STATE

mm m
;

I
BUFFALO,

■

m ■

MOVEMENT

Mm

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■

statement

■ UWWM
■ BV ■

B
(See
Page
„

NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1966

,

NO. 49

Bookstore Discount Cut 5%;
Future Policy Is Undecided
Student discovers reduced discount rate after sale is rung-up on
register.

Task Force Delays Action;
Meet With Meyerson Sought
Associate Professor of History
John Milligan and Student Association Vice President Kim Harrow were appointed co-chairmen
of the Task Force Committee at
its first meeting Wednesday,
June 22. The Committee agreed
to invite President-elect Martin
Meyerson to the next meeting
to clarify his position in relation
to the Task Force.

Dr. Milligan said that the Committee ought to consider whether the scholarly purpose of the
university can be fulfilled democratically through the students,
faculty and administration. He
noted that the primary purpose
of the Task Force should be to
determine the necessary machinery to ensure democracy within
the university.
The duty of the Task Force,
according to Dr. Milligan, should
be to advise only on those decisions which directly affect the
university community, not to in-

terfere with routine administrative decisions.
Associate Psychology Professor
Raymond Hunt suggested that the
Task Force initiate an intensive
study of the entire structure of
the university.
The Committee agreed to publish periodic reports of its progress and to hire a secretary and
two research assistants immediately.

The Task Force, a direct outof The Movement, has
been created to establish dialogue
growth

among students, faculty, and administrative groups and to make
proposals for participation by
these groups in the formulation
of university educational policy.

After withholding further discussion of the purposes of the
Committee until Dean Meyerson
could be contacted, the group
agreed that meetings will probably be closed to the public except in special cases such as hearings. Faculty members agreed
that meetings should be closed
because efficiency of the Committee and informal discussion would
be hampered by pressure from
I.D. CARDS

Attention: Students registered for the Fall semester.
Pictures for this coming
I.D. card will be taken
in the basement of Foster Hall
throughout the summer. Bring
the green IBM card you received at registration with
you. Go now I Avoid the September rush)
year's

the presence of special interest
groups.
Dr. Hunt suggested that the
Spectrum not be admitted because a Committee member might
easily be quoted out of context
of what was said at a previous
meeting.
After reiterating that arguments in favor of excluding the
press were not motivated by the
desire to conceal anything, the
Committe agreed to table the
decision until the next meeting
to be scheduled after Dean Meyerson’s reply.

Other Committee members
elected by student and faculty
associations are as follows; Philosophy Department Chairman Dr.
Rollo Handy; Law School Dean
William Hawkland; Music and
Modern Languages Department
Chairman Allen D. Sapp; graduate student John C. Hellriegel,
and undergraduate students Donald Ames and Dennis Miller.

The University Bookstore’s student discount on textbooks has
been cut from W7&lt; to 5%, by
action of Sub-Board III of the
Faculty-Student Association. The
reduced discount will be in effect for the remainder of the
summer. Policy for the fall semester aas not been determined.
The reduction was explained
by Dr. Claude Puffer, Vice-President for Financial Affairs, as
reflecting the F.S.A.’s need to
remain “cautious” until a summer inventory reveals whether
the bookstore can be operated on
a discount basis. The cut was
unanimously advised by the SubBoard, including Dr. Puffer, Student Association President Clinton Deveaux and Vice-President
Kim D arrow, Assistant VicePresidents for Financial Affairs
Paul Bacon and Charles Balkin,

and Dean Siggelkow.

Mr. D a r r o w commented, "I
would have preferred a 10% discount but find a 3% discount
better than none.” He explained
the 5% figure as a necessary
compromise, since there was
some pressure to remove the entire discount for the summer.
The original discount, instituted in December 1965 by the
Board of Directors of the F.S.A.,
was in effect during the Spring
1966 semester. At that time, Dr.
Puffer revealed, the Board planned to reserve the summer as a
stock-taking period before setting
up any permanent policy. This
reservation was agreed to by the

student non voting representative
to the Board. Mr. Deveaux.
Next fall's policy will be set
later this summer after an evaluation of the bookstore’s financial
state. The Sub-Board has discussed the possible substitution of a
rebate system, in which book
store profits would be distributed
among students at the end of the
school year, in proportion to sales
receipts acquired over the year.
This refund would be applicable
to all purchases. The present discount applies only to required
textbooks and equipment. One
argument in favor of a rebate

system is that it eliminates the
guesswork of determining how
great a discount the bookstore
can absorb. The delay and paperwork involved have been cited in
opposition.

The F.S.A. has control over
most non-academic financial operations of the University, including Food Service, student activities and athletics. Sub-Board III
is one of the policy-advising bodies set up as a result of extensive

student-administration discussions
in 1965-66. F.S.A. operations are
divided among the three Sub
Boards, which have varying degrees of student participation.

Final decisions rest with the
Board of Directors which is administration-dominated. Under
state law, persons under 21 cannot serve on Boards of member
ship corporations, making most
undergraduate officers ineligible
Discussing the problems of
bookstore management, Dr. Puffer explained that a large debt

was incurred at the lime of UB’s
merger with SUNY, because all
assets were turned over to the
Slate and the F.S.A. was required
to re purchase the bookstore and
its contents. Other problems include the increase in inventory
prompted by expanding enrollment and assignments, and the
rising price of books.

Asked to clarify a statement of
last spring in which he described F.S.A. finances as “muddled,”
Dr. Puffer explained that this is
still the case, due to the incomplete progress of contracts that
must be made with the Slate
government. Negotiations now in
progress indicate that the F.S.A.’s

operating costs will be increased
by changes in State and S.U.N.Y.
rulings. He added that the bookstore’s condition is not "muddled." and that the delay in
setting policy for the fall is due
to the need for a thorough in-

ventory.

Dr. Puffer proposed, as longrange goals, after the first “hurdles” of merger and expansion
are completed, progress toward a
non profit store and greater stu-

dent participation. He expressed
interest in the prospect of ownership of a bookstore and other
facilities by a student union, as
in several states and European
countries.
The F.S.A. Board of Directors
will meet June 27 to (receive an
audit report which will be used
in planning operations for the

’66-'67

year

Summer Enrollment Reaches All Time High
As many as 7300 students may
take courses in the Summer Sessions program this year, according to James Blackhurst, Assistant Director of the division.
This summer's enrollment represents an increase of 5000 students over the past four years.
During the same period, the average session credit load per student has increased from 5 to 7Vi
credit hours.

asked if this might indicate the
need for a trimester system, Mr.
Blackhurst answered that UB
provides a greater number of
summer semester hours than institutions of similar size employing a trimester program. "We
have provided reasons for students to go to school the year
’round. We’ve come as close as
any university ever came to total
year ’round operation.’’
UB's Summer program features

special conferences, seminars,
and courses plus a full schedule
of literary, dramatic, musical, and

cinematic events.
A low-cost children’s summer
camp, to be held on campus from
June 27 to August 5 from 9 a m.
to 12:15 p.m. daily, will enable
mothers to attend classes. The
Anthropology Department will
offer an Archeology Field School
from June 27 to August 5 to
excavate in local Indian sites. A

Mr, Blackhurst claims that “the
success and growth of the summer school program is quite
closely related to the fact that
we do research on the needs of
students for particular courses
and attempt to schedule those
courses at convenient time s.”
Students may meet language and
science requirements in the summer without the pressure of additional course work.

In addition various workshops
in business, law anforcamant, finance, and aducation Hava bean
invited to participate in a Human
Relations Workshop from June
27 through July 15. A Clinic

Conference for School Personnel
Administrators (July 10-15) and
an Advanced Workshop in Mental Retardation (August 8-19) will
be held on campus.

UB's Summer Sessions are naunique in that about
65% of the students are regularly enrolled in the University.

Mr. Blackhurst indicated that
there is no evidence of increased
enrollment due to the pressure of
Selective Service crackdowns on
students. The male enrollment
percentage in Summer Sessions
has remained constant for the

Of last year's undergraduates,
36% had attended summer school
at one time or another here. Of
the February graduating class,
68% had attended summer school
the preceding summer. Thus, attendance at Summer Sessions can
either lighten a student's course
load or hasten his graduation.

fall semester enrollment will be
the highest in the country.” When

is also offering a Summer Study

in Europe program on children’s
literature. The Department of
Biology will offer a Radioisotopic
Technique Institute in conjunction with the Western New York
Nuclear Research Center. The
Music Department will once again
conduct a High School Music Institute in band, orchestra, small
ensemble, and chorus.
will be held Community leaders

tionally

“Within two to three years,”
states Mr. Blackhurst, “our summer enrollment as percentage of

series of graduate seminars in
the School of Education will concentrate on “The Cultures of
Asia." The School of Education

past few years

In Summer the campus mum« the
terises Its Winter activities.

Mm*

somnolence that charac-

Registration for the Second
Summer Session will take place
Monday, June 27, from 8 to 11
a m., in Clark Gymnasium.

�Friday. June 34, 1966

SPECTRUM

RAGE TWO

Symposium Discusses Ftesh Water;
Conservation Program Strongly Urged
The New York State Science
and Technology Foundation and
the Buffalo section of the American Society of Civil Engineers
held a water symposium on campus last week. More than 60
speakers presented their views
on water control and pollution,
in keeping with the theme of the
conference, “The Fresh Water of
New York State: Its Conservation
and Use.”

In a paper presented on Monday, June 13, Dr. Harold Wilm,

director of the Water Resources
Institute at the State University
of New York at Syracuse, designated two broad categories of
preventive measures: the preservation of the State’s non-pnlluted water and the reduction of
present pollution problems. Dr.
Wilm pointed out that the problem of water pollution, which
seemed insoluble because of the
financial inability of municipalities to construct the necessary
treatment works, has found a
tentative solution in the New
York State proposal for requiring
municipalities to build these
works, (almost) simultaneously
with financial assistance from the
State and Federal Governments.
He further cited the instigation
of several water study programs
at both state and regional levels
as long run aids in the solution
of water problems.
In a paper entiled, “The Phys-

On* of tho main subjects of last week's water symposium was
pollution. Above: plant pours industrial waste into Lake Erie.
Below: pollution.

ical Environment of Water Resources in New York State,” Mr.
Montanari, director of the Division of Water Resources and
assistant Commissioner of the
State of New York Conservation
Department, pointed out that the
previous lack of study of physical
environment was due to the prevailing attitude that water was
an unlimited source in terms of
quality and quantity.
Both he and Mr. Wilm felt
that the recent drought has caused a significant change in this
attitude and, “has greatly accelerated the interest and concern

Campus Corner
Welcomes
Summer
He's at

HOUIARDjOfinfOnJ

FISH FRY
SI ]9
Tasty Boneless Fillets*Crisp Golden
Brown French Fried Potatoes

■

Cole

Slaw aTartareSauce a Rollsand Butter

WEDNESDAY

&amp;

I

"

FRIDAY NIGHTS

Two Locations:

Students
Open for your
Shopping Convenience
Mon., Thurs., Fri
'til 9:00 P.M.

lues., Wed., Sat,
'til 6:00 P.M.

Campus; Corner

for water which was awakening
in the early 1960’s.”
On the following day the first
year’s highlights of the New York
State Pure Waters Program were
presented by Mr. Robert D. Hennigan. Mr. Hennigan first cited

the “Pure Waters Bond Act”,
under which several study programs have been inaugurated,
including the Municipal Comprehensive Water Study Program,
the Municipal Comprehensive
Sewerage study program and then
a recently completed investiga-

tion of water system needs.
Mr. Hennigan emphasized the
need for intermunicipal cooperation, and stated that, “particular
attention was given to developing
close Federal-State relations in
administration of the water pollution construction grants.”
Dr. James J. Flannery, chief
economist of the Federal Water
Pollution Control Administration,
cited the failure of the present
economic system to hold municipalities and industries accountable for the effects of their waste
disposal on water pollution. The
economist wants to remedy the
situation by requiring polluters
to pay for the adverse effects
caused by their waste disposal.
Polluters would then register for
waste discharges, and the revenues produced by required payments would finance a system of
monitoring and surveillance. This
plan, he continued, represents the
most efficacious method of arresting water pollution.

Dr. John E. Wood III, a member of the Board of Directors of
the Manufacturing Chemists’ Association, asserted that the payments plan would encounter severe difficulties in implementation.

The current water crisis can be
attributed “in part” to our failure
to recognize the full scope of
water resources and the need for
a single purpose water

resources

He described the major water

resources

problem as one con-

the utilization of existing
water resources and the protection of these resources for future

cerning

use.

Franklin D. Dryden, Division
Engineer of the Los Angeles
County Sanitation Districts, said
that the present water supply and
water disposal agencies are limited in geographic scope or legal
powers and do only a portion of
the total management job.
Referring to the Water Resources Planning Act of 1965,
Dryden said that the act provided
one method for voluntary organization within major river basins
and is already being implemented in some areas.

“It is imperative that all communities, industries and aspects
of the water resource problem be
represented,” he said.

“If the charge is sufficiently
modest to be tolerable, it becomes
a license to pollute. If it is set
high enough to effectively prevent pollution, it becomes punitive in nature and a poor substitute for out-and-out regulations,”
he said.
On Wednesday, June 15, Murray Stein, the head of the Enforcement Branch of the Federal
Water Pollution Control Administration, said that greater communication is needed in coping
with international water pollution.
Mr. Eugene W. Weber explained that the duties of the International Joint Commission of the
United States and Canada fall
into two general categories: the
approval of proposals which
would affect the natural level or
flow of boundary waters, and the
investigation and study of specific problems when requested by
the Canadian and American governments. The second function of
the committee has been used
often in the areas of pollution
and lake level regulation.
Mr. Weber said, “One of the
most significant areas of activity

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Thursday, June 16, Dr. Ross E.
McKinney, a professor at the
University of Kansas, said that
a new leadership, necessary in
combatting present water problems, must develop a new water
resources organization “in the
face of old established opposition
that is politically entrenched.”

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In a paper entiled, “The Role
of Water in Civic Planning,” Mr.
George E. Deming, studies director of personal costs with the
Temporary Commission of City
Finances of New York City, said
that one of the major faults with
past civic planning, was its concern with isolated planning activities rather than the integration
of these activities into a functional and meaningful whole.
Besides the problem of the
unification of fragmentary planning schemes, Mr. Deming noted
that there is a significant shortage of trained personnel, especially in the water management field.
The President of UB, Dr. Clifford
C. Furnas, closed the symposium
Friday, June 17, with an address
entitled, “Fresh Water and How?”
Dr. Furnas said that the overall water problem breaks itself
into two major parts—quantity
and quality.
“There is little question,” he
said, “that in terms of water supply the biggest future problems
of the country as a whole will be
how to deal with the various
types of water pollution.”
Dr. Furnas expressed concern
over the multiplicity of govvernmental bodies “suddenly springing up" without a clear definition of responsibility.

�Friday, June 24, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAM THRU

Community House Requires Tutors
For New Remedial Reading Program
Westminster Community House
will inaugurate a summer remedial reading program this summer for about 100 Negro ghetto
school children entering the 4th,
5th and 6th grades in the fall.
Recording to program director
Rev. Richard Ford, “the purpose
is to provide an eight day intensified reading program on a
one to one basis because most
of the children are two or three
grades behind in their reading
and because this kind of program
is more needed and vital than

Taxi for Tobruk'
To Play in Norton^

traditional vacation Bible school."
Rev. Ford emphasized the need
for 100 volunteer tutors for the
program which will last from

'

"Taxi for Tobruk”, the rugged
war drama starring Charles Ax.
navour, Hardy Kruger and Lino;?
Ventura, which won wide acclaim”:
from the critics at its American!;

July 7 through July 15, 9 a.m.
to noon daily. Anyone interested
in tutoring for this program
should call Rev. Ford at 854-0100
or visit Westminster House, 421
Monroe Street off Broadway.
Two training and orientation
meetings for the program will
be held June 29 at 7:30 p.m. at
Covenant Lebanon Presbyterian
Church. 521 Northampton.

Premiere in New York,, opens:?
Tuesday in Norton’s Conference”’
Theatre.
5
Hailed by the New York Her- '
aid Tribune film critic as ”A|e
dramatic journey well worth tak-id
ing . . . a taut war drama loaded ie
with suspense,” it is the story ofy,
four French Commandos who ac-(e
dicentally capture a German sol-id
dier as they attempt to escape uacross the vast, trackless and m
strife-ridden deserts of North Af- it
rica. Admittedly lost—with the nprospects of dying a slow, uncertain death drawing closer by
the minute—their conflicts and "
hatreds rise to the surface to 0
present the film viewer an ineis- y
ive emotional experience seldom
e
found on today’s screen.

-

Fundamentals of Marxism Treated
At Summer's John Brown Institute
The John Brown Institute of
Marxist Studies will conduct a ten
session series this summer which
will emphasize the fundamentals
of Marxism and dialectical and
historical materialism.
William Mayrl, doctoral candidate in sociology at UB and
spokesman for the Institute, described its aims as follows: “In
a world of social upheaval it is
unfortunate that there is such a
paucity of knowledge about the
Marxist contribution to the analysis of society. The Institute
is attempting to offer a wide
spectrum of Marxist thought. The
Institute is not affiliated with any
political party and is not influenced by the ideological disputes
of Marxist parties at home or

abroad. Its aims are intellectual
in nature.’ r
The Institute will meet every
Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. at the
Green Lantern Bookstore.
Other subjects which will be
discussed in the series include
guerrilla warfare, the 'Russian
Revolution, and the changing role
of the peasant in Marxist thought.
The Institute will meet every
Tuesday evening beginning June
21 at 8 p.m. at the Green Lantern
Bookstore, Elmwood near Allen.
Fees will be $5 for the entire
series or $1 for a session. For
further information write the
John Brown Institute of Marxist
Studies, P.O. Box 5, Sta. C, Buffalo, New York 14209, or call
TT 4-8370.

Lino Ventura and Hardy Kruger in a
playing this week

UB.

Associate professor of English
at Massachusetts Institute of
Technology Dr. Norman N. Holland will become chairman of the
Department of English July 1.
Dr. Albert Somit, professor in
the Graduate School of Arts and
Sciences and director of doctoral
programs in the Graduate School
of Public Administration at New
York University, will become
chairman of the Department of
Political Science September 1.
Dr. Holland, who joined the
faculty of Massachusetts Institute
of Technology in 1955, is the
author of three books of literature criticism: “The First Modern Comedies,” “The Shakespearean Imagination” and “Psychoanalysis and Shakespeare.”
A critic whose specialties are
movie criticism and psychiatry
in literature, Dr. Holland had
two television shows in WGBHTV, “The Film Critic” and “The
Shakespearean Imagination.”
Dr. Somit joined the faculty
of New York University in 1945,
and served there until his present appointment, except in the
year 1961-62, when he served as
the Chester W. Nimitz Professor
of Social and Political Philosophy
at the Naval War College, Newport, Rhode Island.
He is co-author of four books:
'American Political Science, A

Profile of a Discipline,” “The
Government and Society of
Burma,” “Achievements in Federal Reorganization,” and “Government in American Society."
He has also contributed to “Encyclopedia Brittanica” and “International Encyclopedia of the
Social Sciences.”
Dr. Somit has had varied administrative assignments, both
academic and governmental.
Among the positions he has held
are: research director for the

The Music Department will
conduct two music institutes July

instruction will be conducted by
associate professor of music Livingston Gearhart and the insti-

10-24.

tute staff.
The University Woodwind In
stitute for College Students and

The University Music Institute
for High School Students, de
scribed by University Band Director Frank J. Cippola as "our
most ambitious program to date,"
will include chamber music in
struction this year, in addition
to band, orchestra, chorus and
small ensemble activity. Class

Woodwind Teachers, under the
direction of associate professor
of music Allen Sigel, will feature
instruction by the Dorian Quin
tel. a nationally known woodwind ensemble. The Quintet will
give performances and offer mas
ter class instruction to the high
school students as well.

The Music Institute is designed
as a pre university experience,
allowing students the opportunity to live on campus for a two
week period under a well-planned program of rehearsals, lectures. recitals, recreational and

Study of Scientific Research Proposals. a joint project of the
National Science Foundation.
New York University and the
University of Michigan; consultant on psychological warfare for

social activities.
The Woodwind Institute will
offer intensive concentration in
the study of woodwind literature,
pedagogy and performance.

the Human Relations Area Files

at Yale University; director of
the New York University Research Study of Attitudes Towards Politics; and, during the
Korean War. intelligence staff
officer on psychological warfare
for the Army in Europe.

Other staff members for the
Music Institute include; band.

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Guest directors in the past have
included Frederick C. Ebbs, director of bands at the University
of Iowa and Col. William F.
Santelman. retired director of
the U.S. Marine Corps Band. Last
year, when the scope of the Institutes was increased to include
orchestra and chorus, guest instructors included Paul Bryan,
director of the Duke University
Band: Mischa Schneider, professor of music at the University
and member of the Budapest
String Quartet here; and Robert
Wadsworth, choral director for
the Newark, New York, Central

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ela Gearhart, director of the University Orchestra; chorus, Mr.
Vito Mason, former director of
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Music Institute Set for Summer on Campus

Dr. Holland to Assume Chairmanship
Of UB s English Department July 1st
The head of the Literature
Section at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a distinguished political scientist from
from New York University will
become department chairmen at

icon#

in Norton Conference Theatre.

Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

e
.,

a
e
s
s
e
j

r

�Friday. June 94, 1N6

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

First in a Series

The Radical in a Multi versity

A Statement from 'The Movement'
of

The Movement
EDITOIPS NOTE—On June 18 the Executive Committee
ndeptei the foUasm
statement as the first in a continual dialogue on
I!niter tar reform la which all members of the academic community are urged
&gt;*

IQ

ftntribute

The Movement grew ant of a general dissatisfaction with the exclusion
oi the students an this campus from the formulation of policy in matters
effecting their academir Uses. The incident which sparked its generation was
the administration of the Selective Servile examination on compos without
the prior content of the student body —or least half oft whom were directly
affected by the decision WhJe opinion teas divided on whether or not the
examination should be administered on campus (some argued that it violated
Vuirermty anlanamt . others argued convenience many students were drawn
to The Movement by the greater principle of student participation in policy
)

A Task Force whose meetings this summer will be covered by the
SpffifUlH. mas instituted by tbr Administration to explore possible legitimate
.

channels far stadents in policy formulation.
system as it is or in being acConfronted by demands from
cepted by it. It is, however, usstudents that the Draft Test not
ually true that the radical can
be administered on campus, the
director of the Counseling and and does become a part of the
Testing Center at Stanford Uniestablishment as his expressed
versity announced that the only
goals are accepted and incorporrationale that would permit such
ated by the system. When this
action would be “in the face of
happens, he ceases to be a radgrevious moral evil after all ordinary channels of political per-

suasion had been exhausted.”
In the eyes of the radical,
every moral and social evil is
grevious. and any sign of procrastination on the part of “ordinary' channels” constitutes justification of defiance. It is the

privilege of established authority
to use the concept of “establish
ed channels” as an excuse to
wink at inequities and inefficiencies in the system. Having observed this, the radical rejects

arguments that "demonstrations
and other shows of force are not
the most effective way to bring
about change and, in fact, often
inhibit reform.'* The radical
knows this is not true, in the
first place, and that it originates
with those who have no desire,
for whatever reason, to see
change come about.
The radical is by definition
“outre.” and therefore has no
interest either in preserving the

ical.

and the .correction of specific
ills, he must formulate either a
design for

a

the

x

can
sort

new university or

creatioJi of , a just force
continue'ti exist to act

that
as a
those

of "conscience" for
who do have the power of de-

Only by these
cision making.
mean; can he avoid being a "reformer" where he would wish to
be a recreator.

Neither of these alternatives is

truly practicable without the
other. In the university, it is
particularly appropriate for the
radical to be an eclectic, and it
is particularly necessary for him
to be a wise politician, if he is
to avoid extinction or, more importantly, becoming the father of
reactionary chaos. He, more than
the establishment, is responsible
to the values that are peculiar
to the university. Nothing in his
revolt can carry in it the seed
that might negate academic freedom, university autonomy or the

peaceful pursuit of wisdom. He
must always move to refine the
expression of these values and
their preservation. He must support and struggle for excellence'
in education, just as he must
have a greater and wiser love of
the University than do the nabobs
in power.
It is to this extent that the
university radical is a traditionalist and even a reactionary.
Many of his values spring from
a view that is traditionally attributed to Medieval universities.
Those values may or may not
have obtained in the Dark Ages,
but they are what the radical
would try to instill in the Age
of Technology. The contradiction
should be no source of discomfort
for the true radical.
The university revolutionary is
aware that destruction can spawn
creation, and that anarchy contains many of the true elements
of organization. He is not unwise

The statement of these fundamental characteristics of radicalism is pertinent wherever radical
action occurs. This certainly applies to radicalism in the uni-

versity.

Radicalism, when it is involved
with changing the University system, faces a peculiar dilemma.
While it is easy to observe specific ills and gross mistakes in
the system, and while the university is a small enough social
unit to be relatively easily subject to revolutionary change, it
is not so easy to formulate what
the revolutionary change should
be, or to what ends the correction
of the specific ills should be directed. T h c university radical
does not usually suggest that he
be in charge of decision making
in the university, and yet he sees
as his observable role the forcing
of correct decisions.
If the radical wishes to escape
being "useful" in causing reform

The movement awaits word from President Furnas on the Distribution of University Policy-Making.

By LITTRELL

garth,

Tiepolo, Goya, Turner,
Whistler, Wolgemut and natural-

require a computer to
now in use at several
ties, including UB. and
industries. Frequently

play, are

universiin many
called

"simulations,’’ the games approx
imale in many respects the conditions of business management

Students playing the games

ly Rembrandt, provide the viewer
a chance to sec rather than com-

Center, rooms

Dr. Boot is the creator of a
game in the IBM library. He will

(whefel and hand-building), jewelry, leather and printing. Refresh-

stay

Open House period.

games.

Games are used at the University here in both the Schools of

Business Administration and Eneineering.

pare by being overcome by his or
their works.
The show, a definite understatement, is without senseless
manipulation and may be viewed
as works of individuality from
their and for their own being,
whether bad or not bad results
are present.
Nothing is given to or taken
from the prints or artists through
this collection of typical work
except the manner of display
which by happenstance may
frighten the viewer away or ask
him to lean into or away from
certain works.
The show will continue in
Room 231, Norton Hall, till June
22, open weekdays from 11 a m.
to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.

Craft Shop Open House
Scheduled for June 29

classroom principles apply to the
real world.
"As in real life, the student
must learn to live with his decisions. What he does at one
point in the game may have
serious repercussions in the later
stages of play,” Dr. Boot says.

devote the first two days of his
to introducing games as
teaching devices to the conferees.
The last two days will be spent
playing various non-computer

than structures. Organisation becomes a function of decentralization and the establishment of new
principle status. Perhaps the
greatest ill that all universities
suffer is that either the right or
wrong people gain prestige and
power for the wrong reasons. The
second greatest ill is that the
principles of power distribution
are woefully inappropriate to the
aims of university education. The
forms of decision-making and
the seats of power are derived
from a corporate model. It is no

agement.

The few prints present a clear
picture of what these then contemporary and esoteric arts felt
exoteric enough to publicly have
Each print, when
reproduced.
viewed separately, dramatizes the
‘illness’ of the time through the
artist in specific particularities
automatically acquired while
spending lime in such environment and conditions during their
attempt to remain responsible
'creative' beings.
The brief encounter with such
'known' artists as Brueghel and
Cranach, the Elders, Durer, Ho-

learn the consequences of various decisions to understand how

The aims of university revolution are not that obscure. They
have to do with people more

wonder that those that seek and

Prints By Great Masters

Dr John C. G. Boot, professor
of management science in the
School of Business Administration. will participate in a conference at Stanford University
June 19-July 15. on new techniques in teaching economics.
Dr Boot will lecture during his
four day visit from July 9 to 12
on the use of management games
as teaching devices. Forty economics teachers from throughout
the country will attend the conference, which is sponsored by
the General Electric Corporation.
These games, most of which

lacklove. The tactics of fundamental change in the university
will come from the revolutionaries. Not all radicals are revolutionary in this sense. And certainly not all revolutionaries are
radical. The high strategists
among the radicals should be
entrusted with the tactics, therefore, and the organizational radicals should elucidate the ultimate goals. This does not imply
any real separation, merely the
best means of cooperation between basically different dispositions which might otherwise conflict or factionalize.

usually gain power act like, go
to, or come from corporate man

Review

Professor to Attend Conference

that order and chaos represent

opposite poles only to the naive,
or as Ginsberg calls them, the

The Norton Hall Creative Craft
7-9 will conduct
Open House activities on June 29.
from 1 to 4 p.m.
Demonstrations in the following crafts
will be presented: ceramics

ments will be served during the
The Creative Craft Center provides the program, facility and
professional staff for interested
students, faculty and staff members to work in ceramics, jewelry, enameling, silk screen, blockprinting and frame-making. All

projects are designed and executed by participants: technical
advice and assistance are con-

available.
Other special summer programs include a sandal making
workshop held each Wednesday
afternoon for six weeks starting
July 6. This workshop will run
during the afternoon hours from
2-4. A two-week student art exhibit will begin on August 15.
The Creative Craft Center
hours this summer are: Monday,
Wednesday, Friday from 11 a.m.
to 4 p.m. and Tuesday and Thursday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and
from 7-10 p.m.
stantly

A further generalization is that
the closer the university administrator is to the academic realm
of the institution, the less corporate his demeanor. The professor in charge of freshman programs is less “corporate” than
his department chairman. The
chairman is less corporate than
his dean, the dean less than the
administrative department head.
Then all distinction ceases.
The aim then is to decentralize administrative functions which
in any way effect the academic
aims so that they are more responsive to, and in fact, are
handled by, those in the academic realm. There should be no
such thing as a man who has the
power of a Vice President for
Business Affairs. The University
is safer under the threat of the
disunity of confederation than it
is under the threat of monolithic
centralization.
In terms of status, the rewards
of prestige and authority must
go to the wise, not to the men
of accomplishment, and to the
humane rather than the efficient,
and to the innovator, no matter
what his success, rather than the
conventional, no matter what his
success.

The road to the accomplish
ment of these goals will be mark
ed by many temporary structures,
many forms of disruption and de
struction, many shows of force,
many shifts in power, and a great
deal of quick change artistry
The radical and the radical revolutionary knows the idea behind
the cure, but hasn't the where
withal to do anything more than
attack the symptoms systematic
ally or chaotically until the sys-

tem falls under the assault or
adjusts until the cure is attained.
It makes no difference which, for
in either case, the university will

be reborn.
—I.D. CARDS—
Attention: Students registered
for the Fall semester.
Pictures for this coming year's
I.D. card will be taken in the
basement of Foster Hall through
out the summer. Bring the green
IBM card you received at regis
tration with you. Go now! Avoid
the September rush!

�Friday, Juna

24. 1966

SPECTRUM

Editorial (Comment
The game mentality of administration
simulates life in the name of efficiency and
collective potential of its constituency. The
primary reason why no large university has
yet produced a quality education lies with
•this simulation which has proven irrelevant
to all but administrators. Education cannot
be simulation; it must be relevant to the
lives of students and faculty. Class lists,
grades, course and credit hour requirements,
and numerous bureaucratic manipulations
have nothing to do with education. The absurdity of university life dawns quickly on
the perceptive mind which expects but does
not find relevance in university education as
it is now constituted. Rebellion becomes
both inevitable and necessary.
Paul Goodman has stated the student
dilemma in the following terms:
At present in the United States, students— middle-class youths
are the
major exploited class. (Negroes, small
farmers, the aged are rather out-caste
groups; their labor is not needed and
they are not wanted.) The labor of intelligent youth is needed and they are
accordingly subjected to tight scheduling, speedup, and other factory methods.
Then it is not surprising if they organize their C.I.O. It is frivolous to tell
them to go elsewhere if they don’t like
the rules, for they have no choice but
to go to college, and one factory is like
another.
For students to “organize their CIO” only
lends legitimacy to mass production educa—

.

.

PAG! PIVI

VISTA Program to Provide Work
In U.S. Poverty Areas This Summer

.

tion. Unless some meaningful and creative
(CPS)—T w o federal agencies
steps are taken immediately to make this this week announced
unique prouniversity’s education relevant to their lives, grams for vacationing college
the students may have to form an Edustudents.
cational Liberation Front.
Sargent Shriver, director of the
If this university wishes only to reap Office of Economic
Opportunity,
the fruits of righteousness in the cultural said that nearly 500 college stugame called corporate liberalism, it can dents will be sent to Appalachia
easily become “the Berkeley of the East.” this summer to bring reading,
writing, and community action
But if it is sincerely interested in attempting, programs
some of the poorest
for the first time, to make large-scale edu- counties intothe
nation.
cation meaningful it must cease its blatant
The students were recruited
emulation of the University of California through
the VISTA program and
system.
are the first to be signed up on
This university needs a radical adminis- a summer-only basis. The normal
stration (it may not be a contradiction in VISTA tour of duty is one year
with some volunteers signing up
terms( which realizes that its only legitimate for a
second year.
academic function lies as a catalyst for
The students, who will serve
experimentation. It is only through experi- from
June 15 to August 15, will
mentation that relevance is established.
be sent to 100 communities in the
To invoke the interim period between “mountain hollows” of Appalach
campuses or the transition from private to ia, Shriver said.
public function as an excuse for inaction
Shriver said that some of the
represents the height of irresponsibility. volunteers will help organize
community programs in towns
Neither of these changes precludes immedi"have not even learned how
ate and radical experimentation with uni- tothat take
the first
toward
versity education. The formation of new community action.’’ step
“legitimate channels” like the Task Force is
In another first-time federal
not enough; we have too many old ones.
program, the Office
of Education

The summer Spectrum hopes to function announced that it is hiring 100
student lawyers for the summer
as an illegitimate channel for a campusto investigate school desegregawide dialogue on what a university should tion complaints.
be. The first contribution may be found on
A spokesman for the Office of
page four. We hope others will participate Education said that
students were
either through letters or columns.
decided upon so that the agency
could put into the field the largest possible investigative force on
the smallest possible budget.
Faced with manpower shortages last year, the agency con-

NSA Conference to Yield Stress Analysis
(CPS)—The U.S. National Student Association plans to begin
by mid-summer a two-year program that will involve students,
faculty, and administrators in a
close analysis of the college experience—and just what’s missing
from it.

oughly integrated” of the NSA

efforts in education.
He said it “seeks to answer
the largest of the questions facing us as students today: How
do you define an education so
that it meets the needs of this
generalization? How can we make
the college experience a fully
valuable one?”

The program is an outgrowth
of NSA’s three-day conference on
student stress at Warrenton, Va.,
last fall. The stress conference
was financed by grants from the
National Institute of Mental
Health and the Danforth Foundation. Another NIMH grant has
made possible the two-year Campus Self-Studies Program, NSA
spokesmen said, in announcing
their plans.

The program will be run by a
coordinating staff in the NSA
national office and will directly
involve 16 “representative campuses” in the plans. In addition,
Sherburne said, another 100 campuses will develop similar programs with help from NSA.
On each campus about 100 students, faculty, and administrators, including the college president, would participate in the retreats where the “central focus
will be on eliminating unrewarding frustrations from the college
experience while developing a
new concept of what it should
be.”

The new program was disclosed
at a press conference in Washington this week at the same time
the official report on the stress
conference was released.

In announcing t h e program,
NSA President Philip Sherburne
termed it a “program to make
known the problems and the
needs” of the student—“the forgotten man in higher education.”
Sherburne said this program represents the broadest, most thor-

THE

NSA representatives said that
the American college campus has
become a largely irrelevant and
impersonal place and that the
discussions at the stress confer-

SPECTRU M
STEPHEN A. CRAFTS

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

JOANNE

BUSINESS MANAGER

LEEC&amp;NT

EDITORIAL BOARD

JULIE SULLIVAN

BILL SHERMAN

ALICE EDELMAN

SHELDON BERGMAN

JOCELYN HAILPERN

SUE WORTMAN

GINGER HOLCOMBE
FIRST CLASS HONOR

RATING

Sk
%

vu
v

PRESS

EDITORIAL

POLICY

IS

DETERMINED

BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

ence centered on these topics.
They suggested that students as
a group are more concerned with
the quality and relevance of their
list of student concerns—Vietnam, the draft, drugs and sex.

universities who attended
stress conference were:

the

—Giving students a voice in
making decisions that affect
them, ranging from evaluating
professors’ teaching abilities to
setting social rules and housing
regulations.
—Dropping grading from a significant number of college courses—pehaps for the whole freshman year—to encourage learning
for its own sake rather than competition for grades.
—Offering college credit for
“field work” in the Peace Corps,
poverty programs, civil rights activity, and the like.
—Encouraging more independent study at all levels of a college
education. The report recommended the kind of independent
work in which a student can
pursue his own strong academic
interest with guidance from pro-

fessors rather than the type

which allows a student to choose
one of several prearranged topics for study.

mer.

Seeley said a major target will
be to find out whether Negro
children in the South have really
been given a "free choice" of
attending a previously all-white
school. Some investigators also
will go to school districts in the
North.

Where investigators find that
are not working, school districts will be asked
to reopen registration or lake
other steps, Seeley said.
free choice plans

The student compliance officers
will also make recommendations
about faculty desegregation or the
need to close small, isolated
schools maintained solely for
Negro

students.

Seeley said that in addition to
examining records furnished by

the local school officials, the law
students will interview parents to
find out whether they have been
fully informed about desegregation plans.

The Johnny Cash Show
At Melody Fair

education than with any of the

Among the proposals of the
students from 33 colleges and

In addition to the students, the
office has hired 15 professors and
school officials to work on the
compliance staff. David S. Seeley,
assistant commissioner in charge
of the desegregation efforts, said
that the summer help from students and professors would mean
that the agency can field about
175 investigators during the sum-

A Review

topics that are thought to top the

The students suggested that
the American campus needed to
be radically reshaped in order
to provide a student with an
education that is relevant to the
“outside world,”

centrated on obtaining paper
compliances and was unable to
check out complaints against
school districts that had signed
the compliance form. In doing
this, the agency was heavily criticized by civil rights leaders for
failing to follow up complaints.

By

SHELDON H. BERGMAN

From the Southland of America has conic one of the well

springs of today’s popular music.

country and western
music and from it came “The
Nashville Sound” which led to
folk-rock and even influenced
the Beatles. Johnny Cash is considered one of its deities; right
up there with Hank Show. Ernest
Tubb, and Eddy Arnold. His mu
sic is straight from The Grand
Old Opry and it travels poorly.
Cash’s singing can best be
described as a loud monotone.
He plods through each song as if
It’s called

it

were

a

dirge. From

“Big

River” to "Rock Island Line,”
there was not one deviation from
his dull method of delivery. His
blunt style was perfect for one
number, “The Streets of Loredo.”
Unfortunately, he buried the
song along with the cowboy.
Mr. Cash’s attempts at humour
were heavy-handed. “Joe Bean"
was gallows humor as its worst
and his monologues were equally
deadly. The only soqg. that was
really funny was "The one on
the Right was on the Left" but
the lightness which this song de
serves was missing. His bar
monica playing in "Orange Bios
som Special” was an improvement over his singing; the notes
were distinct and clear.

The Statler Brothers nearly
succeeded in saving the show
Their humour is refreshing; it's
The Warrenlon report concludcountry but not corny. “Flowers
ed that besides an education more
on the Wall" was delightful and
relevant to the modern world,
their musical impressions were
there should be “more authentic
some of the finest I have ever
and personalized relationships beare the only male
tween students and faculty.” It heard They
group who can carry' off an imcalled for the revision of the
pression of the McGuire Sisters
campus community from a “nest one moment and then
ad lib with
of adversaries” to a “group of a thunderstorm the next. They
collaborators” of the teachers and blended
surprisingly well in
several love songs, although the
and the taught

tenor is a bit thin and the bass
tended to dominate the melody.
With more polish they could be
mistaken for the Four Preps with
a twang.
As for June Carter, "pure
country" is the perfect designation for her brand of music. She
has the harsh, shouting delivery
that was predominant in country
music twenty years ago. Her
humour is also a throwback to
that era: country slapstick. Only
“Cottonfields” was done well;
mainly because it is a number
that sounds best when it is delivered in a raucous manner. I
like banjo-picking to be clean
and crisp; hers wasn’t.

Waylon Jennings and his Wayarc modern country, The
Nashville Sound. His Waylors
were excellent because they used
the proper amount of backbeat
to season the country songs.
Only Jennings’ inability hampered them. He performed well
when he stuck to Marty Robbinstype ballads and country-rock but
his attempts to make "Norwegian
Wood" a country ballad was ludicrous. It is a tribute to Mr.
Lennon and Mr. McCartney that
the song survived at all. With
folk music, Jennings was almost
as bad. "Four Strong Winds” is
a soft ballad, not a plaintive
country love song. Waylon Jennings needed as much support as
he could get and his Waylors
were almost equal to the task.
lors

Western

New

York

is

not

western Tennessee ami Melody
Kair is not the "Grand Old
Opry,” This fact was vividly clear
at last night’s performance. Only
the Statler Brothers kept this
reviewer from leaving after
Jennings started rhapsodizing

about Arkansas.

�PAGE SIX

Friday, June 24, 1946

SPECTRUM

We Are Not

mm Eiti SLrman Lack of Plot Line Becomes An Asset

The most exciting aspect of summer movie-going in
Buffalo is Fred Keller’s annual film festival at the Circle-Art
Theatre. This summer Mr. Keller, who is one of the few
theatre owners in the country who cares about and is sensitive to the films he presents, is beginning the festival
with a week of Fellini/Antonioni films. These two directors
are the acknowledged giants of the Italian cinema, but there
is little common ground between them. Antonioni’s technique is that of the novelist; his films are slowly reflective
in pace, as discursive as an essay, and rich in density.
Fellini’s technique is that of a poet; he moves rapidly from
one perception to the next, structuring his films not by
logic but by his own intuitive sensibility. One might say
that Fellini’s films are inductive with urgent images and
fragments flashing brilliantly by on the screen and finally
expanding themselves to give an asymptotic view of the
nature of reality. Antonioni’s technique is deductive, and
all of his films begin with a thesis to be proven—the thesis
usually being that man’s angst is rooted in the breakdown
of what Martin Buber has called the “I-Thou” relationship.

By GINGER HOLCOMBE
It is with the “oh-so-proper”
accents of Mid-Victorian England
ringing delightfully in my ears
that I acclaim Theatre Outlook
Ltd.’s June 18 production of

Unfortunately, I find it necessary to quibble over the
choice of Fellini and Antonioni films which will be presented. Absent from the program are La Strada and Cabiria,
two early Fellini films, which, outside of 8V2 are still his Janet Crowder, an eminent Vicbest work. Absent also is Antonioni’s L'Aventurra, his best torian, stars in "We Are Not
Amused," shown last week in
film. One cannot possibly quibble, however, with the choice Baird
Hall.
of films to be presented during the first week in July,
following the Antonioni/Fellini retrospective.
Truffaut’s Shoot The Piano Player, surely one of cinema’s finest achievements, will be featured the first three
days in July. On the same program with the Truffaut
masterpiece is Alain Renais’ Muriel. If there is little common ground between Antonioni and Fellini, there is even
By GINGER HOLCOMBE
less between Trauffaut and his countryman Renais. Both
“It is not good to have hatred
are classified as leading members of the French nouvelle
disguished as pity, hatred disvague, but if one sees these two films it will be easy to
guised as love, or hatred dissee why the classification is not only misleading, but ulguised in any way. We cannot
timately worthless.
deal with that. Only when hatred

We Are Not Amused. Eric
Salmon and Janet Crowder, the
two eminent Victorians, brought
the era to life with the words of
that life and those times.
The absence of a standard
“plot line” or any device to purposefully call the attention to
its unity may have caused the
drama to seem incohesive to
some. Upon closer appraisal,
these “lacks” became assets, allownig a “free-association” selection of readings and scenes to
characterize the age more fully.
In the first part, for example,
the railroad controversy merges
into
Victorian literature by
means of a poem and letter by
Victorian “literati” (T. Baker and
Thomas Rowdier, D.D., respectively).
Beginning with a political and
statistical portrait of the midpoint of Victoria’s reign (18681869) the program continues,

sometimes seriously, often wittily, through a series of poems,
letters, journals, scenes, and
newspaper passages depicting the
pleasures and problems of Victorian England. Railroads, literature, theatre, moral and immoral,
child labor, capital punishment,
the place of women, Victorian
fun, and the end of Victoria’s
reign were all treated appropriately and with a delicate blend
of satire and sadness, often accentuated by the gestures and
faces of Mr. Salmon and Miss
Crowder. Miss Crowder’s saccharine rendition of “The Old
Armchair,” Mr. Salmon’s wonderful singing and mugging of
“Samuel Hall,” and their joint
performance in the scene from
“The False Step” by Arthur Matthison were highlights of the

performance.
Let it not be forgotten that
Mr. Salmon has directed himself
and Miss Crowder in this produc-

tion. His satirical bent and talent
for comedy are well reflected in
this work.
In short, we were indeed
amused.

Interview

A. J. Doyle: 'Quislings of Liberte’

One Eyed Jacks and The Naked Prey, to be shown on
July 4 and 5, are good examples of actors turned directors,
directing themselves. One Eyed Jacks is a Western in the
best tradition of the often misunderstood genre. Not only
does it stand with The Gunfighter, Last Stage To Thunder
Rock, Ride The High Country, and a few others as one of
the best Westerns, but it is the last film Brando acted in
before his acting turned into what can only be described
as unconscious self-parody. The Naked Prey is a “sleeper”
which, when it played this spring at the Bailey Theatre for
a week, went virtually unnoticed. Cornel Wilde, who left
Hollywood disgusted after being type-cast for so many years,
proves in this film, his first directorial attempt, that his
talent is large. The photography in the film is superb—by
itself worth the price of admission. Both films do, however,
overreach themselves, but their scope is so large, and the
good moments come so often, that the program is outstanding.
Black Orpheus is featured at the end of the first week
in July. It is trite to speak of a film as “beautiful” but there
is really no other word to describe this one. Since the
Circle-Art is showing well over fifty films this summer, it
is impossible to review any of the programs adequately.
No film is showing for more than three days. I would
suggest that all movie-heads go down to the Circle-Art and
pick up a brochure of what is being featured this summer.
Later on this summer, there will be a Godard festival,
a Bogart/Belmondo festival, and a French comedy week.
If it weren’t for Fred Keller’s commitment to cinema, his
insistence that the Circle-Art show only quality films, worthwhile cinema in Buffalo over the past four years would have
been almost non-existent. The theatre deserves support,
especially from the University community, the largest potential movie-going audience in the area.

is recognized for what it is and
dealt with accordingly can it be
used as a constructive (or instructive) force.” Out of context,
this sounds like a propaganda
manifesto. Actually, its focus is
the hypocrisy of that philosophy
of lies against which Mr. D. J.
Doyle cries out in his play “The
Quislings of Liberte,” which is
beginning its run in Baird Hall
tonight.

Mr. Doyle expects and deserves honesty. He has taken the
time to be deeply concerned with
the morality of the hypocrisy

which he has seen around him.
In his play he uses hatred as an
instructive and destructive force
in the formation of youth. He
has observed the “hypocritical
ethic,” the lies, disguises, and
false images constantly created
in men and passed along to their
children, and he protests against
it. The powerful portrayal of his
almost allegorical characters reaffirms and projects his beliefs,
and shows a portion of this man’s
own dynamic attention.
Mr. Doyle is one of those fortunate playwrights who can sit
down and write, losing all sense
of time in the process of crea-

tion. He finds his materials and
the flavor of his dialogue in
people and places around him.
He keeps notebooks in which he
stores possible future lines,

SPECTRUM WANTS
Now Earn

EXTRA CASH
Selling Ads for

The SPECTRUM
Work on the

Dr. Kaiser Clarifies Policies
SPECTRUM
Of Grade-Rank Distribution Photography Staff
To clarify University policy
concerning student academic rec-

ords. Admissions and Records

Director Dr. A. L. Kaiser restated
what has been and continues to
be that policy: “(1) the Office
of Admissions and Records ha.
never and will not release grades
to any person or agency except
at the request of the student; the
Selective Service System has
never, requested grades; (2) the
Office of Admissions and Records
has not and will not release rank
in class to the local Selective

Service Board except at the specific request of the student; (3)
the filing of a Selective Service
Form 109, or 103 (for graduate
students) is entirely voluntary
It is the intention of the
Admissions and Records Office to
cooperate with students by complying with their requests to report their status to their local
boards and to assist the student
in this way and at those times
which best protect his interests
and satisfy the requirements of
local boards for information.”

with full use of Darkroom
Facilities and Equipment

...

Inquire Room 355
Norton or Call

831-3610

speeches, and bits of character
to give his work more realism.
He is a living playwright, in the
sense of having realized himself and his work while living
and experiencing fully.
Though this is Mr. Doyle’s first
produced play, it is not the only
product of his prolific mind.
Once you have experienced the
timeless power of “The Quislings
of Liberte,” you like myself, will
look forward to the production

of the rest of his works.

Registration for the Second
Summer Session will take place
Monday, June 27, from 8 to 11
a.m., in Clark Gymnasium.

YOU!

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                    <text>FULBRIGHT
LECTURESHIPS

|

STATE

FURNAS'
_

STATEMENT

I

p—

9)

(See

UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

VOLUME 16

I BWMBB

(See Page 11)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1966

NO. 46

FURNAS REJECTS GOOD FAITH PROPOSAL;
CAMPUS WAITS FOR THURSDAY MEETING
President Furnas yesterday
agreed to accept the first two
proposals offered him by the student-faculty movement. He said
the third proposal was "impossible" to comply with at this lime.
The first two proposals asked
that representatives to the Task
Force be elected by their respective bodies rather than appointed
by Pres, Furnas. The third proposal asked evidence of "good
faith" from the administration by
an agreement that the question
of Selective Service exams on
campus be decided by the executive committee of the Faculty
Senate.
Students and faculty members
have disbanded their picket until
Thursday.
A meeting has been called for
on Thursday evening, May 12th
by members of the Student Sen-

Students-Faculty
Rally Early Monday
To Define Demands
A mass meeting of The Movement convened Monday morning,
May 9, at 7 a.m. to consider action to be taken, since it was felt

jthat the ad hoc committee which

met with President Furnas Saturday, May 7, made “no concessions” to proposals offered to the
administration at that time.
At this meeting the following
resolution was passed:

Be it resolved that
1. a picket line be set up at
Hayes Hall
2. the following negotiating delegation go to the administration
to present the three proposals
(3, 4, 5) and receive satisfaction
on their proposals—Peter Ruben,
Diane Garvey, Sue Orlofski, Steve
Crafts, Larry Faulkner, Ann Marie
Leonard, Fred Ostorof, Ed Rostin,
Jeremy Taylor, Clinton Deveaux,
Dr. Arthur Kahn, Dr. Norman
Lazarus, Dr. Sidney Wilhelm, Mr.
Bill Merrill
3. the faculty members of the
Task Force committee be properly elected by their senate and
from the entire faculty.
4. the student members of the
Task Force be properly elected
by their two governing bodies
(the Student Senate and the Graduate Student Association), and
from among all students.

ate. the

Monday morning Larry Faulknar announced
Dr. Kahn is in background.

5. the administration show its
determination to alter significantly its power of final decisions,
by the President’s specifically
designating the power of decision
on the administration of the Selective Service Examination on
campus to the Executive Committee of the Faculty Senate, after
its consultation with all interested bodies.

unofficial agreement.

|r;_

In Furnas' Office
Viewed Proposals,
Passed Resolution
5

A meeting was called Saturday,
May 7, at 3 p.m. in President
Furnas' office to discuss proposals sent to the President by David
Edelman, Jeremy Taylor and the

•V/
-j.

.

Art Department
&amp;

American Association of Univer-

sity Professors, Buffalo chapter.
Present at this meeting were

Faculty

President Furnas, Assitant to the
President Wesley Rowland, the
president and treasurer of the
Graduate Student Association, the
president and vice-president of
the Student Association, the Executive Committee of the Faculty
Senate, Dean of Students Richard
Siggelkow, and Deans from various schools of the university.
By unanimous vote, the following statement of the resolutions of the body were adopted:

Okay Interim Move
Art students and Art Department faculty have met on two
recent occasions to discuss conditions entailed in the projected
move of the Art Department to
an interim campus.
A vote was taken at the meetings to determine the group's
opinion of the move. The vote
received was: in favor of the
move, 58; opposed, 2; qualified
“for the move”, 1; no opinion,
1; according to Art Department
Chairman Philip Elliot.
At a Student Senate meeting
Wednesday, April 20, a proposal
to investigate alternatives to the
planned campus was passed. At
this meeting a petition of the art
students expressing their disapproval of being divorced from
the main campus and of being
moved to the interim campus was
accepted.

tion and four members of "The
Movement."
President Furnas' statement
was released by the administration at 4:30 p.m. yesterday afternoon. Dr. Furnas was in Los Angeles at the time.
Earlier in the day, spokesmen
for the sludent-faeulty movement
met with administration members
to present their demands. (See
story: Monday Meeting). At the
end of that meeting members of
the studenbfaculty movement
and administration members announced that all three proposals
had been accepted, but that official confirmation was needed
from Pres. Furnas.
The student-faculty movement
was represented by Dr. Arthur
Kahn, Stephen Krafts and Larry
Faulkner.

CLIFFORD C. FURNAS

Senate Meeting
Sunday Evening

Demands Proof
Of 'Good Faith'
The proposal passed at the
special meeting of the Student
Senate called by President Clinton Devcaux Sunday night is as
follows:
Whereas, students and faculty
have a legitimate right to participate in policy formulation in an
academic community; and
Whereat, channels should never
be closed for student and faculty
initiation of changes in administrative decision; and
Whereat, the administration of
this University hasby

In regard to the second resolution, it was decided by the assembled body that if the delegation sent to the administration
did not receive “satisfaction on
their proposals” a sit-in would be
staged inside Hayes Hall.

Students

Graduate Association, the

Faculty Senate, the Administra-

'Jf

Proposal 1—

Whereas this ad hoc committee

recognizes legitimate concerns
felt by students and faculty in the
university with respect to their
participation in the formulation
of academic policy, and

Whereas such concerns relate

to the immediate need which this
committee recognizes of opening
and maintaining a dialogue among
students, faculty and administra-

Rick Saltar

"th.

tion groups.

•*

—Photo by RuMaoll Goldborg

(Cont’d on Pg. 3)

its endorse-

ment of a concrete set of proposals formulated Saturday by an ad
hoc committee revised a previously indicated position that discussion has been

closed, both on
the issue of administering the
Selective Service Examination on
this campus and on the issue of
increased student involvement in
University policy determination:
Therefore, be it resolved that
the Student Senate of SUNYAB
accept as a reasonable first step
toward meaningful structural
changes in the University the set
resolutions passed by the ad hoc
committee, but be it further resolved that the Student Senate
executive committee be instructed to attend the meeting with
Dr. Furnas; Be it further resolved that the Student Senate propose that the appointed faculty
members serve on the task force

committee until

representatives

may be properly elected by and

from the faculty.
Tho Sonata urges that as an

indication of Iha administration's

determination to altar significantly its power of final decision, tho
President of the University designate the power of decision of
the administration of tho Selective Service Examination on tho
campus to the executive committee of tho University Senate (tho
Faculty Senate) upon consultation
with tho executives committees
of the Student Association and
tho Graduate Student Association.
(Cont’d on Pg. 3)

�t

M 0 A T M 1

1D&lt;«)

i*?( .1

«

Tuesday, May 10, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

'Buff. Action Group'
To Fight Poverty
In Buffalo Ghetto
‘Equal Employment
For Negro’s Sought

*

Adult Education
Program Starts

Slum Housing
Prime Target

Students from UB, steelworkers, civil rights workers and organizers have joined forces to set
up a civil rights oriented neigh-

borhood association in Buffalo’s
lower east side. The Buffalo Action Group (BAG) is located at

385 Broadway near Pratt.

Two months ago a pilot proj-

ect began with two full time or-

ganizers, I/eon Phipps, forme-ly

of the Student Non Violent Coordinating Committee’s Mississippi
project, and Victor Aronow, a
Syracuse University graduate student associated with a number
of community projects in the
North. Working with them are
Philip Cook, an MFC student and

Buffalo steelworker; John Lewis,
a resident of the area; and a
number of local residents, high
school and junior high school

r

V

Y

students.

Founded in late February, the
first months were spent in getting to know the people in the
neighborhood and in becoming
familiar with similar groups in
the neighborhood and the relevant city agencies and in studying first hand the conditions in
the neighborhood.
“The area we are working in
is made up of parts of census
tracts 25 and 14, two of the poorest in the city," said Mr. Aronow,

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a project spokesman. “Unemployment is high—well over 20%—
and public welfare runs about
222 per thousand.”
BAG is working in the area of
the ghetto south of Humboldt
Parkway and north of the Ellicott Redevelopment Area. “About
10 thousand people live here in

very crowded conditions. The
area is about 94% Negro. Most
of the whites live in the east
and west fringe areas.
Current activities at the Buffalo Action Group center around
mer months Active support is
being given to the NAACP’s attempt to secure equal employment opportunities for Negroes
by participating in that organization's action at Ray Weil Chevrolet. BAG members regularly
join these demonstrations and
distribute civil rights information in the community as a part
of their attempt to create a politically conscious and informed
community.
A preliminary housing survey
of the projects area turned up
at least 50 rundown, burned out
or abandoned houses in need of
demolition and over 100 dilapi-

Most of BAG’S programs will
begin this summer. One is a work

club program.
“Several weeks ago some kids
in the neighborhood approached
us with a plan to set up work
clubs. Many of the kids in our
neighborhood don't go to school;
those who do will soon be out for
the summer. Jobs for teenagers,
especially Negroes, are scarce,”
explained Mr. Aronow. “We propose to set up several work clubs
on a cooperative basis in old
garages, or

vacant buildings,

where kids and adults can come
and make things.”
An adult education program
and high school tutorial is planned to begin as soon as the closing of local colleges releases students for the summer. Carol Vogt,
a North Tonawanda High School

dent, is slated to head the pro-

gram.

“Lots of folks have come up
here from the South. They maybe
never could read too well. Here
they got menial jobs or maybe
no job at al. And they just forgot
how to read and write or maybe
they never could,” explained Mr.
Phipps.
At an organizational and planning meeting of the BAG held
May 3 a housing program was
outlined. It outlines a six step
program to force landlords to fix
up substandard housing while
freezing rents. The initial housing survey will be followed up

The most important program
will of course be the building of
the neighborhood association itself. “This is entirely in the hands
of the neighborhood people themselves," said Mr Aronow, declining to speculate on the exact nature of the neighborhood group’s
direct action programs. “I can be
certain that BAG will continue to
support the efforts of the civil
rights movement in Buffalo.”
The interview took place in the
BAG’S crowded staff apartment
at 148 Archie Street, a block from
the BAG office. A steady flow of
neighborhood people moved in
and out throughout the interview.
In the background the record
player repeated the project’s favorite song, James Brown’s “Buffalo has got a Brand New BAG.”
Each bedroom wall bears the
inscription, “WE SHALL OVERCOME.” People wore buttons
reading, “Buffalo Action Group
FREEDOM NOW” or more succinctly, “NOW.”
Leon Phipps said, “This is going
to be a long summer and a warm
winter too. We are going to make
it hot to bring equality and justice to the people of Buffalo.
Many people thing that the Negroes in the North are free, but
the only difference between Buffalo and Mississippi is that Missisippi is down South and Buffalo is up South.
“The people in the neighborhood are upset. They say how
are you going to get it (freedom)
in Vietnam if you can’t get it
in the Buffalo slums? This unrest
must be used for constructive
change. I am non-violent because
I think that it is the only way
that will work.”

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f

Saturday's Events
(Confd

from P.

1)

Now therefore this ad hoc committee recommends that the President name a Special Task Force
committee whose mandate shall
be:
1. to inquire into and make
proposals with respect to establishing an open and continual
dialogue among such groups:
2. to make such proposals as
they deem appropriate regarding
organizational meetings for participation by these groups in the
formulation of educational policy
in the university.

,

Proposal 2—
In response to Resolution #1.
the President has appointed the
following committee; and direct-

ed that three additional student
members be added to the com-

mittee—namely, two undergraduate students to be selected by
the Student Senate and one graduate student to be selected by
the Graduate Student Associa-

tion;
Professor Ebert, Chairman;
Professor Sapp, Professor Murray, Professor Hunt, Mr. Deveaux,
Dr. Lazarus, total 10 (ten).
Action 3—
The ad hoc committee recommended that the Faculty Senate
Executive Commitee meet in
special session to consider immediately the matter of holding
the Selective Service test on the
SUNY at Buffalo campus.
Proposal 4—
At a special meeting of the
Executive Committee of the University Faculty Senate, held at
5:25 p.m., May 7, 1966, in the
Office of the President, called
by President Furnas to consider
the matter of holding the Selec-

Sunday Night...
(Cont’d from P. 1)

Be it resolved that:
1. the Senate declare eligibility
for its two nominations to the
above mentioned task force to be
open to all undergraduate students and that these two positions be temporarily filled from
the Student Senate, and urge the
Graduate Student Association to
open its appointment to all graduate students.
2. the Senate urge that all meetings of this task force be open
to participation by all members
of the University community.
At the meeting’s opening, President Clinton Deveaux stated that
the reason tor the meeting was to
“make clear” to the Senate what’s
been happening. R’s up to the
Senate how to act or not act.”
When asked the purpose of the
ad hoc committee which had been
called by President Furnas Saturday, he explained that the committee was “to advise President
Furnas as to what should be done
in regard to what was at the time
the present situation.”

.

.

.

live Service examination on the
university campus, the President
advised the Executive Committee
that the matter as to the holding
of the test on campus was not
necesarily a closed one. Thereupon. the Executive Committee
recommended that the President,
at the earliest possible opportunity, meet in joint session with
and consult with the Executive
Committee of the Graduate Student Association in order to review the university's decision in
regard to this matter. The President concurred with this resolution.
Proposal 5
The ad hoc committee then
considered a student petition demanding immediate and positive
action by the President changing
cedures, and structure by six p.m.
Sunday. The demand was rejected.
When the meeting adjourned.
President Furnas commented: “It
was a good and fruitful meeting.”
Dean of Students Richard Siggelkow said: “I think it is a good
solid statement.”
At 7 p.m. the Executive Committee of The Movement met with
Clinton Deveaux and Dean Siggelkow to consider the above
statement. Following this meeting, Mr. Larry Faulkner of the
Executive Committee of The
Movement addressed a general
meeting of The Movement. He
reported that the Executive Committee felt the statement made
“no concession” to the ultimatum
offered by The Movement. Therefore, it was agreed by the general
body that the sit-in scheduled
for Monday morning at 7:45 in
Hayes Hall would be carried out
as planned.
Mr. Deveaux stated that the
task force committee is to “present all plans to Dr. Furnas and
recommend one after careful deliberation on all issues. The task
force's decision is not binding.
“Recommendations may ask for
Graduate Student Association.

The Faculty Senate and Student
Senate changes, maybe even the
University Council. University
Council, whose members are appointed by the Governor, can
change the fundamental structure
of the President's office.”
Senator Marion Michaels believed the President could not
accept the demands made of him
by The Movement because.
“Whether the President is responsive to the students can be
decided by the President, but a
written delineation of powers
would mean approval of University Council.”
Senator Ellen Cardone hoped
that as a “show of good faith on
the administration’s part,” President Furnas would designate the
power of final decision on the
administration of the Selective
Service Exam on campus to the
Faculty Senate.

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SPECTRUM

Editorial Comment

.

.

THE PROBLEMS OF VICTORY

By STEPHEN KRAFTS

The amicable meeting between the faculty and administrators acting in the absence of President Furnas
and the negotiating committee elected by the mass meeting Monday morning resulted in averting the projected
“sit-in” and in the words of Task Force Committee Chairman Dr. Charles Ebert, “took the first step" toward
significant university reform.
This unquestionable victory for the “movement” sets
the stage for even more dramatic achievements in academic reform—but it also raises the sticky problem of
how the concerns that coalesced in the three mass meetings and the demonstrations will be articulated. It is
obvious that the Graduate Faculty Committee on the
Selective Service no longer represents the. constituency
of the university reform movement, yet no other bodies
other than the institutional channels of student and faculty government presently exist to articulate those grievances, and it is also obvious that those “legitimate” are
inadequate, since the mass meetings were called despite
their existence.

academic reform; or, the entire political structure of the
university could be so altered as a result of the Task
Force report both of these would become irrelevant, and
the university might move into an era of “community
government” such as has been successfully instituted on
other major campuses in this country.

In any case, the situation may be supposed to have
entered a new phase of collective bargaining and political
“in-fighting”. The skills required to manipulate this
kind of situation are substantially different from the
skills reouired to raise the issue in the first place. The
tactics of mass meetings and vocal demonstrations must
give way to the tactics of rhetoric rationale and compromise. It may be hoped that the “movement” is capable of providing these skills as well, for if they are not,
then all this may have been in vain.
It should also he remembered that this present state
of flexibility and dialogue was brought about in jjreat
measure through the pressure of massive action. If that
threat is removed the whole ipiestion of meaningful reform may slip into a beaureacratic &lt;|iiairmire and sink
slowly from view. This must not be allowed to happen.
The demonstrators have won the first battle—but they
have yet to win the war.

THE

SPECTRUM

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Tuesday, May 10, 1966

Cacotopia and Eutopia

.

Several alternatives are possible: The Student Senate, the Graduate Student Association, and the Faculty
Senate may rise to the occasion and become means of
articulating the legitimate demands for reform; a new,
“non-institutional” organization could be created from
the constituency of the mass meetings and the members
of the GFCSS who originally articulated the goal of

&gt;

The university which once prided itself on its socially abrasive
The selective service examinainfluences has allowed expedition to be administered May 14, ency to become its modus operand). (Expediency is here defined
21 and JGrie 3,' interpreted as an
encroachment upon academic
as subordination of moral prinfreedom, assumes that the latter
ciple for the sake of facilitating
exists. The exam, like the loyalty an end to purpose.)
oaths, are but the most blatant
Where the university used to
and concrete extension of governbe dedicated to turning out critmental control.
ically acute men, it now strives to
Questions of academic freedom create socially malleable constituencies. The university has known
lend to center on these actually
sin and rather than being reminor issues. Academic freedomniks concentrate on Feinberg pulsed, it has gloriously grovelled
around government agencies for
oaths as multimillion dollar fed
contracts by which to enhance its
oral subsidies and contracts quietimage in the cultural game called
ly turn the university into a handmaiden of industry (Clark Kerr’s corporate liberalism.
term), and, therefore, of the milIn all this the student means
itary which as we all know repnothing. He has the choice beresents the government. To fight
tween further alienation and subloyalty oaths becomes as absurd,
mission. Submission or expediency
in this context, as agitating in the
rpquires certain degrading but
South for voting rights to choose
generally minimal grovellings.
between two racists.
Further alienation or rebellion
It should not be surprising to
(non-expediency) becomes a new
anyone that this university has
form of civil disobedience (i.e„
made its facilities available to the living as one wants).
Selective Service, its bedfellow.
Making
university
facilities
Nor can it be surprising that Presavailable to the Selective Service
ident Furnas should be instrulike the war in Vietnam, has a
mental in bringing about this
tinge of authoritarian arbitrariarrangement. His claims to acaness to it. In neither case are the
demic detachment include a stint people involved consulted regardas Undersecretary of Defense and
ing something which affects their
his present position as a member personal lives.
of the Board of Directors of the
So now we have an encroach.Marine JJidland Trust Company. ment or rather an extension; The

Selective Service examinations.
One becomes innured to the totalitarian aspects of conscription and
expediently enters his requests
for student deferment, guilty perhaps by dint of his middle-class
status of exemption while the
poor and ignorant fight the wars
of corporate liberalism. It becomes expedient to play the game
with the system as the university
has done. The student, however,
does not stand to profit thereby.
I do not pretend to be a moral
man—I am not even sure what
the term means. I find myself
constantly motivated by expediency as a matter of survival, but
I dubiously pride myself with
knowing that it is not my life
that I am leading. I am a wretched
pawn.
I had originally planned

to take
the Selective Service examination
and score my 80 or whatever,
even though I oppose the war in
Vietnam and am afriad to die. I
could thereby put off the ultimate
confrontation with a government
I detest yet at whose feet I grovel.
Yet even pawns can become
kings for a day. Sometimes an indefinable moral sense breaks
through my crust of expediency,
a second childhood for a man on
moral medicare. I shall not take
their bloody test. “There is some
shit,” wrote e e Cummings, “I
will not eat.”

oCetterA to the Editor
Attack On
Abortion
TO THE EDITOR:

Mr. Callan needn’t worry about
the onslaught of letters written
in reaction to his human and logical view on abortion. Two things
come to mind: (1) Why is it always the most worn-out wheel
on a cart which makes the most
noise? Apparently, the “bourgeoisie” (how nice to be able to
pigeon-hole human individuals)

are too complacent or ignorant
to think of speaking up. (2) Unfortunately, Mr. Callan chose to
write on abortion in a political
column. What in blazes has being
moral, or being immoral, which
is the thing to be in our brave
new world, have to do with being
on the left, or on the right, or
in the middle, or in Lapland?

The atmosphere in Messers.
McCubbin’s and Gross’ letters reappears and is amplified in Miss
Shapiro’s reaction to Mr. Callao's column.
The incredible
hodge-podge of emotion, illogic
and irrelevance that runs through
her letter has become a trademark of this newspaper There
is no hope of persuading Miss
Shapiro and friends. Nowadays,
one is convinced by an argument only for what he already
believes, which makes for intransigent extremism. However,
some points which have been misintrepreted should be touched
upon.

Abortion, which is the expul
sion of a nonviable fetus, that is,
one too young to live outside
the womb, has been considered
together with infanticide, which is
the direct killing of a child
within the womb, by cutting,
crushing, or craniotomy. Abortion
is murder because it is direct
killing and no mere exposure of
the child to danger.
Soldiers who are sent to battle can at least defend themselves. By abortion a child is
taken from the only place where
it can live and put in a place
where it cannot live; there is no
more efficient way of killing a
person than this.
When does the fetus become a
human being? We cannot use
probabilism here. We must not
kill what is probably a human
being. Just as we may not bury
a man if he is only probably
dead, since he is also probably

alive, so we may not kill a fetus
if it is only probably non-human,
since it is also probably human.
As for using abortion to abtain relief from the burden of
rearing an illegitimate child, or
one too many (what’s the matter,
no more advocates of birth control?), murder is no solution to
previous loss of self (of other-

deferred.
The draft boards are going to
use the test as a criteria for
drafting men no matter who gives
the test. Therefore the university is helping the student by
making it easier to take the
test. The administration has not
turned the university into a “procurement agency for the miliwise) control.
tary.”
The dedication of the anti-reThe procurement agency is the
actionaries is admirable, and inlocal draft board which makes
deed, in certain fields. It would little differentation as to where
be nice if, keeping that dediit is going to procure men. Those
cation, some of the bitterness in industry and agriculture can
would give way to a sense of
get a deferment similar to an
humor. Perhaps Miss Shapiro educational deferment. My brothwould feel better about the whole
er, an electrical technician, has
thing if she had been aborted.
a 2-A classification. A deferment
Then she would have no worries for essential skills. A friend was
at all. Personally, I would feel
legally declared a conscientious
terrible if I had been aborted .,. objector. He is now serving as a
Florian Perini
medic in Germany. They draft
college graduates also, ask some
of the seniors.
The draft in its present form
Campus
may not be here to stay, but until something else comes along,
TO THE EDITOR;
every male 18 and over will
In your editorial of May 3,
have to face it at some time,
1966, you stated, “the administraeducational deferment or not.
tion has turned the university
. . . into a procurement agency
I am glad that the GFCSS is
for the military—and it has done
making a “whisper of protest”
so without a whisper of protest.”
about the draft procedures, but a
In my mind this is a false
“roar of constructive criticism”
actualization. I agree that stuis needed. And the administradents of the university should be tion could show a little more
knowledge of happenings involvexempt from military sendee,
ing the university.
but with qualifications.
Clear statements of policies in
First I would like to state
local areas and reasons for such
whether the student believe he
has an obligation to serve his policies would help develop a
country in military service, or mutually satisfactory relationship
does not, is irrelevant here. The between the administration and
bare fact is that the draft is a the students and faculty.
Donald L. Walter
legally functioning part of our
society. Every male has to face
that fact.
Disgusted
Second, registration in the university is not a continual right
Dept.
of the student once he has begun
school. It is a privilege. Every
TO THE EDITOR
privilege has a responsibility connected to it that must be met
I expect to graduate in May—to maintain the privilege.
but beside having a lowered tuThe student’s responsibility is ition this is the first good thing
to maintain the grades necesthat has happened to me at
sary to make satisfactory progSUNYAB!
ress through the university. In
Here is the plight of the typfact, it is a privilege to attend
ical senior—as a History major,
college, not the right of every I am in the new colloquim which
high school graduate.
requires a great deal of work.
The draft test is a means for In addition. I have comprehenthose having difficulty fulfill- sives on May 5. Doesn’t the
ing their responsibility, putting chairman of the department reathem in a precarious position, to lize that a student has enough
maintain the privilege of attendto do without studying for this
ing the university, thereby being
(Confd on Pg. 10)

Selective Service
And
Test

Scores Hist.

Senior

�Tuesday, May 10, 1966

PACE PIVI

SPECTRUM

*'jT

Draftee Falls From Third Floor
Of Selectice Service Building
By J. MARK LONO
(CPS)

Kelly Services offers temporary working opportunities designed for you and your specific needs. Kelly Services is

located in 184 cities, so there will be work wherever you

happen to be. And you'll be paid top rates. Save money
for tuition, books, clothes, travel, or just plain fun. Here
are some of the jobs you can have this summer:
KELLY GIRL

Typing
Stenographic
Secretarial
Clerical
Tabulating

KELLY MARKETING
Demonstrating
Telemarketing
Mystery shopping
Canvassing
Survey-taking

KELLY LABOR

KELLY TECHNICAL

Truck driving

Layout
Designing

Inspection assembly
Machine operation
Stock work

Drafting

Illustrating
Programming
Surveying

Lumber work
General labor

Work when you want to! Where you want to in any one of
the 184 cities where Kelly Services is located. Visit the
Kelly offices near your campus or write to the Kelly office
in your own hometown.
(Equal Opportunity Employer)

I

I

IV LLJ

Joseph C. Didinger was a bright
yo'ing man married to a beautiful,
alert girl. Last December he was
busy readying his 45-foot, twomrsted yawl for a proposed sailing venture to the West Indies.
"5arly this January. Joseph Didinjer was the subject of an official U. S. Army statement:
"At approximately 9:30 a.m.
on January 4. 1966. Joseph Didinger. a pre-inductee from Thornberry Township. Pa., fell from
a window of an unoccupied office on the third floor of the
armed forces examining and entrace station. Boston Army Base.
He was refedred from pre-induction by Somerville Selective Service Board 22 and was one of 266
pre-inductees undergoing physi-

cal examinations."

Didinger was 22. He was a hardworking man with varied interests. He was in the Merchant
Marine: he built boats: he was a
garage mechanic. And for two
years he worked in the rare
books section of the University
of Pennsylvania library.
He attended Pennsylvania State
University but he had stayed
there only a year. His father, a
Philadelphia architect who himself was graduated from Penn
State, explained why:
"The place is too big now.
much bigger than in my days, and
I think my son asked his professors loo many questions. He was
fascinated by logic and when he
was in high school he used to
take special evening classes in
the subject. He was always
searching for truth. He asked a
lot of questions."

It is no longer a secret that
colleges have problems with
drugs, sex, and thievery. The
word is now also getting out

that students, many students,
have serious emotional problems,

and that some of them end in
suicide.
Suicide is the second greatest
cause of death among American
male college students. A survey
of 209 deaths occuring at Yale
University between 1920 and 1955
showed that 92 students had died
in accidents and 25 had committed suicide.
The belief that only introverts
are suicide-prone was dispelled
at Yale—10 of the 25 held student offices, six were athletes,
and 10 belonged to fraternities.

(Cont’d on Pg. 10)

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In 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th,
and 5th.
The Remington- 200 Selectro Shaver is a new
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before. It has a dial with 5 positions that lets
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In 2nd, you can knock off
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In 3rd. you get this wild
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over your cheek No burn.

By

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time you shift

couple

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Student Suicide
Is On Upswing
On College Campus

Doo

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yet rugged as an old hound dog.
Salty Dog. the original all cotton
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today's most exciting fabric

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You couldn’t get straighter
sideburns at the barber’s.

�PAGE SIX

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, May 10, 1966

Yesterday, you may have had a reason
for missing a good, nourishing breakfast.
Today, you don’t.

No
in

-mak
that’s to

Each glass delivers as much protein as two eggs,
QQ as much mineral nourishment as two strips of
crisp bacon,
more energy than two slices of buttered toast,
and even Vitamin C-the
juice
orange
It comes in a lot of great flavors, too. Look forthem in your cereal section.

�Tuesday, May 10; T9M

iPiCTRUM

Lecture on China Today

Maud Russell, former social
worker and resident of China
for 26 years, will speak on “Peoples’ China Today." Tuesday, May
17 at 8 p.m. in the Conference
Theater. The lecture will be followed by a Chinese documentary

film, “Glorious Festival," commemorating the 15th anniversary
of the Chinese Revolution.
Miss Russell, publisher of the
Far East Reporter, resided in
China from 1917 to 1943. spanning the beginning of China's
popular movements and including
five of the war-time years in far

'Free Improvisational Music
Featured at Baird May 10
Three ensembles of composerperformers will offer a program
of free emprovisational music
on May 10th, 8:30 p.m, in Baird
Hall, Sun Ra, Albert Ayler,
Giuseppi Logan and their groups
will play original works that have
been heard previously only via

Try-outs for Play
Start May 12-13 Newport Jazz Festival
summer
Scheduled June 20-24
western provinces.

Try-out for the first play of the
season, Quislings of Liberte, by D. J. Doyle, will be held
on .the stage of Baird Hall from
7 to 10 Thurdsay and Friday, May
12 and 13. This is the first of two
original plays which will be produced in the summer sessions.
The casting is open to all interested students, faculty, or local

residents. If anyone interested in
reading for the play cannot attend the try-outs in Baird, they
should contact Dr. William S. E.
Coleman, 831-2045, for a private
audition.
The proluction opens on Friday,
Juen 24, 1966, for a two week-end
run. Rehearsals will be arranged
when the production is cast.

Featuring folk artists from the
U. S., Canada, and the British
Isles, the Newport Folk Festival
will be held July 21 to 24 in
Newport, Rhode Island.

In addition to four days of
evening concerts and daytime
workshops, the Newport Foundaof Directors

tion Board

have

designated Wednesday, July 20,
as a pre-festival day for children.
Oscar Brand has organized the
children’s day at which Theodore
Bikel, Judy Collins, Bessie Jones
and Buffy Sainte-Marie will per-

form.

Traditional folk crafts will be
demonstrated at the festival and
will contribute to the children's
day activities.
The complete
wool process, mountain pottery,
wood carving and weaving will
be shown.
Performing at the festival will
be: Theodore Bikel, Oscar Barnd,
Bob Dylan, Jack Elliott, Mimi
and Dick Farina, Judy Collins,
Brownie McGee and Sonny Terry,
Phil Ochs, Clark Kessinger, Howling Wolf, Grant Rogers, Buffy
Sainte-Marie, and Carolyn Hester.

$2.9 Billion for College Classrooms
Republican
Opposition

Not Heard
WASHINGTON (CPS)—Without
a dissenting vote, the House this
week (May 2) approved another
$2.9 billion over the next three
years to help build college classrooms.
The vote was striking, however,

because of the continual rumblings within the Republican Party
that the administration would
have to cut back on domestic
spending in order to wage the
war in Vietnam and stem the
current inflationary trend as well.
When the Johnson budget proposal exceeded what GOP leaders
thought were “realistic” limits,
Republicans pledged to make the
cuts the administration would

not.

The vote on the constructionaid package came after scarcely
40 minutes of debate. Republicans backed the measure all the
way. Little difficulty is expected
in the Senate.
Even more striking was another House vote overruling a
proposal by President Johnson
that would have resulted in saving federal funds.
The President proposed in his
January budget message that the
government’s student loan program be transferred to private
concerns and that the nearly $200
million involved be spent elsewhere.
The proposal ran into a constant stream of criticism, and
the House Committee on Education and Labor recommended that
the loan program be kept—at
least for the present.
In going along with the committee’s recommendation, the
House authorized $190 million for
the current year’s loan program
as opposed to the $34 million
the President had requested in
his plan to phase out federal
support of the program.
Aside from rejecting the loan
program plan, the House went
along with the administration’s
college-aid requests.
The construction-aid funds are
actually an extension of the college construction program passed
by Congress in 1963. President
Johnson had requested $743 million for the first year’s extension
of the program and the House
"■rote in amounts for the next
two years as the President had
not requested specific sums.
Even the $2.9 billion over the
vxt three years is inadequate,

the House was told by the Office
of Education. Office of Education
spokesmen have estimated that
$4 billion will be needed in the
next two years in order to take
care of rapidly expanding college enrollments.
Meanwhile, another administration education program—the
Teacher Corps—is still suffering
from a lack of funds.
The corps was approved by
Congress last year but its funds
were dropped at the last minute
by a House Senate conference
committee.
Officials, who had hoped to
start the program last fall, now
are setting a starting date this
summer. They have issued a call
tfor corps volunteers, with a deadline for applications of May 31.
Officials say that school districts
and training programs are already lined up and corps members can be in 200 to 400 city
and rural school systems by fall.
The 8 to 12 week training program is set to begin in mid-June;
the corps hopes to have 3,000

volunteers enlisted by that time.
While in training the volunteers
receive $75 a week plus $15 for
each dependent. While working
for poverty school systems they
w’ill be paid at the local scale
but with money furnished by the
federal government.
The administration had requested $13 million in emergency
funds to get the program under
way this year. The Senate okayed the full $13 million but it was
cut to $10 milion by the House.
A final compromise has still to
be worked out.
Nevertheless, Commissioner of
Education Harold Howe II said
“plans for the recruitment and
training of teachers will be carried out" and he termed previous
reports that the Office of Education would not go ahead with the
program this summer a “misun-

LIBRARY HOURS
DURING EXAMS
Hardman: 7:30 a.m. to
1 a.m. Tuesday, May
10 to Friday, May 20.
Lockwood: Monday-Friday, 7:30 a.m. to 11
p.m. Saturdays, 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Sundays, 1
p.m. to 11 p.m.

REGISTRATION
SCHEDULE
Registration for day
summer school will be
held as follows:
1st session—
June 6, 8 to 11 a.m
Clark Gym.
2nd session—
June 27, 8 to 11 a.m
Clark Gym.
3rd session—
July 18, 8 to 11 a.m.,
Office of Admissions
&amp; Records, 201 Hayes.

•

All residence halls will
close Saturday, May 21
at 8 p.m. Cafeterias will
serve meals through May
21 at 6:30 p.m.

PACE SEVEN

derstanding.”

The House dropped funds from
the corps from its fiscal 1967
budget bill, and if this cut remains the program could die after
one year.”

12:004:00

8:00-11:00

DATE

Philosophy 204

Friday, May 13

History 102
F

Saturday, May 14
Monday, May 16

1)
2)
1)
2)
1)

Political Science 152
Political Science 151R
Economics 182
Economics 181R
Sociology 102

Tuesday. May 17
Wednesday, May 18

I

Thursday, May 19
Saturday. Kay 21

C

J

|

K

1)
2)

Z

Q
Psychology 102
Psychology 101R
English 102

Printed

include several virtuosi. TwenMichel Samson, a
Dutch student of Yehudi Menuhin, will contribute his talents
to the Ayler ensemble, and he
will be joined by another conservatory graduate, Joel Freedman, cellist, in an unprecedented
association of classically trained
and improvisational musicians.
Sun Ra plays piano and many
other instruments, including the
celeste, and a galaxy of novel
electronic pianistic devices. His
ensemble are a highly disciplined
group of his students, several of
whom enjoy recognition among
the musicians of the improvisalional sector. Ronnie Boykins,
bassist; Marshall Allen and Pat
Patrick, saxophonists; Clifford
Jarvis, percussionist, are among
his complement. Sun Ra has re
corded for Savoy Records and
Saturn Records. He has two current releases on the ESP label.
Albert Aylcr, saxophonist and
his brother Don Ayler, trumpet,
have lourned Europe with their
own group and with Cecil Taylor.
Giuseppi Logan and his ensemble performed at Town Hall
on May 1 ,1965, in a program
that also featured Albert Ayler's
ensemble, Mr. Logan is an ESP
recording artist. Ho will be accompanied on the tour by Dave
Burrell, pianist. Clarence Strowman, percussionist, and Scotty
Holt, basist. Saxophonist l,ogan
also plays piano, Pakistani oboe,
flute, clarinet,
trumpet and
violin.

by

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recordings. The twenty musicians

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Cooks Play Check'
Will Be Read May 21

OPENS MONDAY
�
MAY 16th

)

I

There will be a stage reading of
an original play by Albeit S.
Cook entitled “Check,” on May
21, at 8:30 p.m. in the Undercroft
of St. Andrew's Episcopal Church,
3107 Main St. Enter the church
parking lot from Lisbon St.
The cast includes members of
the faculty of the English Department (Leslie Fiedler, Mac
)
Hammond, William Sylvester) as
well as prominent local actors |

!
)

CHARLIE

!

Playboy Jazz Guitar
Poll Winner

j

[BYRD TRIO!

Wildy, Nancy Koekery,
Richardson, Charlotte
O’Donnell and Ann Gaylcy). The
reading is being directed by Mrs.
(Donald

Frank

Helen Tousler.

Late registration will
be defined as registration
after 2 class meetings,
requiring a $5 late fee.
Registration for the
Evening Summer Session
will be held June 2 in
Clark Gym, 6:30 to 8:30
in the evening.
Registration for the
fall, 1966 semester will
be September 8. The first
day of classes is September 9. Freshman orientation will be held September 7 and 8.

EXAMINATION SCHEDULE MAY 12-21, 1964

Thursday, May 12

THE SPECTRUM

4:00-7:00
Modern Languages 102
1) Modern languages 104
2) Business 0202

f
I

Who with Stan Gati
Sold Ovar 1,000,000
copies of

|

"DESIFINADO"

|

We’re lining up

12,000

office workers fox

SUMMER JOBS
now!

m

TypUU, stenographers, twitchboard operator*, file clerks, keypunch oparators . . are need
Warn all, in over 400 cities,
beta use Manpower is tbs world*
largest temporary help service.
80, if you*re going to be available
lor asnmsr work and want the
past Job you can get, atop in at
the Manpower olllca in your
boms city.
.

Drama Sc Speech 126
E
1) Mathematics 141R
2) Mathematics 142
3) Mathematics 242
1) Chemistry 102
2) Business 5202
3) Chemistry 121R
1.)
1)
2)

MANPOWER
m
mv

ins vntr but
1)
2)

Y
P

TiMronABT

*05 WALBRIOCi M.0C.

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|

�Tuesday, May 10, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

TRAVEL

'63 Monxa Coup*, black with red
interior, 4-speed, 145 hp, heavy

duty suspension. Dunlop road
speeds—$1000. TR 3-1426
'64 Rambler American, excellent
condition, economy car; low
mileage; asking $1150. Contact B.
Burrows, 837-7286 weekdays.
'58 Karmin-Ghia, no rust, good
mechanically. Mobil station on
Terrace and Court Sts. TL 2-8725.
$395.

Honda ISO cc., excellent com!.,
$350. Call NL 2-5905 after 5

p.m. weekdays—all day Saturday

and Sunday.
'58 Lambreta, 125 cc., asking $125.
Call 832-7079, Tom or Joe, after
6 p.m.
Furniture for two bedrooms, living room, kitchen (includes
rugs, TV, etc.) Must sell! Call
832-6799.
Grad. Students

fully furnished apartment. 4 Vi rooms—one year old—very comfortable,
inexpensive—near campus. Stereo hook-ups in every room. Call
before 8:30 a.m, or after 11 p.m.
(3-4)

836-1691.

Jaguar XK-150, '58. Mechanically
excellent, body good must sell.

$150. 882-5979.

'62 Honda SO. Good condition;
electric starter; $125 or best
offer. 876-2698.
'51 Nash Fast Back. Excellent
condition. Std. transmission,
radio and heater, many extras.
(Green Hornet’s car). Call Brian,
837-6938

UB Jef Flight to Franc* leaving
June 27th, returning Sept, 5th.
Round trip NYC Paris, $340. Faculty, students, employees of
SUNYAB eligible. Contact Sanford Leff soon! 834-1869.
j

OPPORTUNITIES
Golf Lessons

Randy Fox, pro
—individual, group rates, Niagara Sports Center, range and
miniature golf
Athol Springs
Circle, Rt, 75, Hamburg. Phono
—

—

YOIII'S FOK A SONG.
Paris Belts. Each has a
style as individual as
the rocking beat of Jay
and The Americans'
new album,
"Sunday and Me".
i.,.

825-9812.

PERSONAL
Free Room and Board. Help with

two children. 10 minute walk.
Call TF 6-4333.
Fun

for all ages at NIAGARA

SPORTSCENTER

—

Miniature

golf, game room arcade, golf driving range. 1701 Niagara Falls

Blvd., Tonawanda, N. Y.
Have Bass—Need Band! If you
need a good bass player, call
Hon at TX 6-1991.

If you saw someone hit my 1966
two-tone blue Rambler May 2
in the Main St, lot, call TF 9-2164.

Reward.

The Paris Competition
Stripe Belt. White
with contrasting
stripes. $3.50.

The Paris Cinch Ring
Buckle Belt. Stitched
shrunken steerhide.
Black or brown. $4.00
The Paris Paisley Belt.
A wild splash of color
in tune with Spring. $3.
When you wear a
Paris Belt, you show
people who's boss.

WANTED

3000 DES PLAINES AVENUE. OES PLAINES. ILLINOIS 60018

Avctibbb at these campus stores.

O'Connell, Lucas, Chelf
Martin's Ltd.
Squire Shops

Mother's helper to live in. Private
room, desk, TV. Two school
aged children. Nice home. 634
4298 after 4:30.

APARTMENTS

Female

wanted for
summer, option to continue
’66-67. Just opposite campus, modApt. 837-6320 or 831-4610.
Roommate

Completely Furnished Apt. avail
able for summer in Sheridan
Parkside. Suitable for three stu-

dents. $45 each per month includes all utilities. TR 7 0112.
Summer Sublet, 2 3 roommates. 4
bedroom house fully furnished.
1 block from campus—11 Mcrrimac (off campus). Call Pole or
A1 835-3281.

7 Room Apartment, summer sublet, available June 1. Rent reas-

onable, utilities included.
886-6763 after 5 p.m.

roommate to share six room
furnished apartment, 45 Minnc
sola Avenue, 4 blocks from cam
pus, for first summer session
Call 834-2890. Rent $10 per week.
Male roommate needed to share
7 room apt, with two others
for summer session Walking dis-

tance. Option to continue in fall
semester of '66. $50 month with
utilities: 588 Englewood Ave. Ph.
TF 5-3162. Ask for John.

Faculty Member would like to
sublet reasonably priced apt.,
vicinity UB, from June 1 or earlier. Also interested in cheap car
for transportation. Call 831-3418
days, 839-1151 eves.
Female Roommate Wanted. Have

apt. Call Pat. 831-3982.
Apt. for Rent. One block from
campus. Utilities included: fur
nished. Call 831-3474.

apt. For summer, op
tion for '66-'67, furnished. 10
rain. walk. Call 837-7256 or 831-

2 bedroom

3642—Angie.

On# bedroom apt. to sublet for
summer Princeton Ct. Apts.
10 minutes from campus. Call:
837-8212 between 5-8 p.m,

As advertised in Playboy and Cavalier

Male

Call

Wanted to Rent or Sublet: Furnished apt. for graduate couple
during first session, June 6-July
15. Write: John Cannon, 2900
Wheeler St., Berkeley, California.

ffljEiU

Roommate to share apartment 15
minutes from school. $38 per
month. Call Russ 831-4545, 8:304:30.

Help wanted, male or female, full
time for summer. Mature students wanted by national co, to
help demonstrate a new product
now being introduced into Buf
falo area for the first time. Re
quirements: must be junior or
senior or post grad, mature, neat
appearance, good personality, ambitious. and a desire to make
money: must have car. Students
in other areas now making 5000
to 7000 a year part-time. Come in
11:00 sharp. May 14, Saturday
morning, at 1287 Military Road.

Will the girl who witnessed the accident on
Lockwood’s steps Thursday evening, please call
837-7454 immediately.

Apache W
Mocs
swing!

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�M U 5 T 5 3 'i i,

Tuesday, May 10, 1966

Altucher, Connolly, Klein
Win Fulbright Lectureships
Faculty Members Will Travel
Abroad During ’66-67 Sessions
Dr. Nathan Altucher. acting
director of the Student Counseling. Center and assistant phychology professor, English Professor
Thomas Connolly and Associate
English Professor Marcus N.
Klein have been awarded Fulbright Lectureships for teaching
abroad during the 1966-67 academic year.
Dr. Klein will teach courses
in American Literature and
Civilization at the University of
Toulouse; Toulouse, France. He
has been at UB since 1965, after
teaching at Barnard College for
thirteen years. He received his
doctor’s degree in 1962 from
Columbia University.
Author of After Alienation:
American Novels in Mid-Century,
Dr. Klein’s articles have appeared in The Nation, The Reporter, The New Leader and Book
Week

“I'm looking forward to spending the year in a warmer cli-

mate,” he commented.
Dr. Altucher will teach courses
in counseling and guidance at the
College of Education in Prasanmitr, Thailand.
He came to UB in 1960 after
serving as counseling psychologist at the Testing and Counseling Center at the University of

Texas. He received his doctor’s
degree in 1957 from the University of Michigan.
“I am very pleased and looking
forward to it,” Dr. Altucher said,
“it should be very enjoyable,”
Dr. Connolly will lecture at the
University College, Dublin, Ireland. He mentioned that he will
probably teach English and American literature courses.
A member of the UB faculty
since 1953, Dr. Connolly completed his graduate work at the
University of Chicago and his
undergraduate work at Fordham
University.

He is the author of Swinburne's
of Poetry and From
Ararat to Suburbia, a history of

Theory

the Jewish population in Buffalo.
He has written three books on
James Joyce and several articles
on Faulkner, Hawthorne, Dickens,
Pound and Keats.

.

THOiS 75PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

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DR. THOMAS CONNOLLY

Buffalo Foundation Inc.
Awards Scholarships
To 3 High School Grads
National Merit Scholarships
awarded to three high
school graduates by the University of Buffalo Foundation, Inc.
last Wednesday.
The recipients are: Stephen R,
Chalmer, 52 Arundel Rd„ Buffalo; Nancy J, Moulaison, Bangor, Maine; and Eileen Swertloff, Cedarhurst, New York.
Mr. John Galvin, chairman of
the Foundation Board, commented, “We are pleased to provide,
for the second consecutive year,
these scholarships to three such
outstanding high school tudents.
We are beginning a tradition
which we are confident will benefit both the student recipients
and the University for many
years to come.”
Each of the scholarships, Mr.
Galvin noted, is designed to provide the difference between a
winner’s ability to pay and the
cost of attending the college or
university of his choice.
were

If you haven’t examined
a new Chevrolet since
Teistar II, the twist
or electric toothbrushes,

_,

j .mmmiL- t*»

Coleman, Carton, Plesur Greek Educator Speaks
Win N.Y. Grants-in-Aid
Associate Drama and Speech
Professor William S. Coleman,
Associate Classics Professor
Charles Carton and Associate History Professor Milton Plesur have
received New York State grantsin-aid.
Dr. Plesur received the grant
in .the field of special studies for
completion of a monograph
“American Diplomacy in the
Gilded Age (1865-90).”
In the field of humanities, Dr.
Garton received the grant for
completion of research concerning Roscius and the Roscian tradition.
Dr. Coleman received the award
in the field of humanities for a
history of the London productions
of “The Merchant of Venice”
since 1701. The history will emphasize the influence of the English attitude towards the Jews
upon the interpretation of Shylock.

Greek educator Evangelos Papanoutsos explained the educational process as a “movement
of the mind in dialogue” in his
discussion “Dialectical Framework of the Congnitive Function” last Monday.
“Static thought is sterile,” Dr.
Papanoutsos asserted. He added
that thought is stimulated by
doubt, and solutions to technical
problems are reached by "an
incision upon a block of facts."

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When two sides of an issue
are explained, he said, each position and counterposition can

•

beproved, and the development
of thought becomes a dialectical

•

process.

Dr Papanoutsos discussed the

effectiveness of the educational
bureaucracy noting, “The best
committee is composed of three
members if one is sick and the
other on a trip abroad.”

•

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�'

Student Suicides
(Cont’d from Pg. 5)
At the time they died, eight
were having financial trouble,
five had had their marriage proposals refused, and one was a
practicing but remorseful homosexual. Although the well-known
Yale Clinic was established in
1925, only 11 of the 25 were undergoing any kind of professional
treatment.
Why suicide?
“Things are
tough all over” is the traditional
observation of the cynic, so why
does emotional crisis center on
the university?
Maybe it doesn’t center there
at all. Emotional difficulty, and
even suicide, is usually a pretty
personal thing, and accurate in
formation about its prevalence

among different

social

groups

may never be available. In the
meantime, a disproportionate

amount of the attention will be
focused on the classroom fish
habitat.

bowl, the researcher’s

A girl at Stanford who attempt
ed suicide was discovered to suf
fer under domination from her
mother, who selected the girl's
friends and her school.

.

.

.

.

over.” Without manifesting any
emotional responses she fired off
instructions about covering up
and repairing the damages,
A coed wrote a personal account of her attempted suicide for
the University of Wisconsin Daily
V'ardinal. Her comments were
Blunt;
“I was sick of social pressures
which said that you must act this
way or that so you will be ac
ccpted. I was sick of the feeling that I was accepted for reasons having nothing to do really
with me, but from the home or
parents I came from, f was sick
of the idea that you had to be
rich, sleep with everyone, and
kiss everyone’s royal American
to be someone. I only wanted to

from Pg.

.

.

be myself but that never seemed
to be enough.
“My parents hounded me about
my grades to the point that I
spent more time worrying than
I did studying. The idea of failure was the worst thing in the
world that could happen. There
was no chance to begin over; if
you failed the first time that
was

&gt;,i?f

“S

II.-

“My dorm mother was a horrible woman—sweet to your face
but stabbing you in the back all
the time. I had to go to a head

shrinker sbme years before and
she found out about it and that
was the end. She wouldn’t let
me alone. I couldn’t do anything
right even if it were the way
I combed my hair. She almost
drove me to my grave. By the
time exams came I was a nervous

wreck. I didn’t even kriow as
much as my name anymore.
“I went home right before
exams for a weekend. Then it
happened, the worst it had ever
been. Then came the sleeping
pills—75-125 aspirins and a razor
blade.”

The problems that gang up on
the student don’t seem to be the
direct fault of the school itself.
Dr. Marshall Peck of the Los
Angeles Suicide Prevention Center said that “none of the problems experienced in the university arc created by the university.”

Rather, he said, these problems

are the result of the student’s

early life and his relationships
during this period with parents,
teachers, clergymen.
Dr. Peck did acknowledge,

•

though, that the university is a
“massive trigger” which activates
the worry and incites the anxiety
originaly caused by pre-college
interpersonal situations.

The factors which bring the
to suicide—mental, sexual, career, identity, social—are
the same problems anybody faces.
But it is during the college years
that they all come together, often
head-on.

student

Caps and gowns will
be distributed in Norton
Card Room, basement
floor, May 25-27, 8:30-5
and Sat., May 28, 10-2
p.m.

for

can only cry. I can't say yes or
no—I’m like a puppet." After
the incident, her mother “took

Letters

p

LATE NEWS

In the hospital after her suicide attempt, the girl said: "I
don’t know who I really am,
what I really want, or where I
am going. I think things and
worry and when I feel things I

(Cont’d

Tuesday, May 10, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

.

4)

worthless exam? How can we take
time out for the "comps" and

write decent term papers
of
Dr.
Morton—but does this mean that
an average student is no longer
good enough to get through bestill

and study for finals? Most
us arc not as brilliant as

GRADUATES

cause he can not match Dr. Horton’s ability?
Also, a vicious cycle is growing here—1—The school is letting in
more students than it can provide
for, thus classes are overcrowded;
2—The teacher becomes overworked, so he marks harder to
discourage students from signing
up for his course:

Expanding military and commercial business
has created even more openings.

3—Thus the student suffers
for many teachers mark unfairly
to avoid overcrowding in their
courses. Does the student learn
more?—NO!—he only gets lower
marks.
The grading standards are be
com;

this does not mean that the quality of our education is improving! Knowing SUNYAB, these
conditions will only grow worse.
A Disgusted Senior

you have yet had to make, we suggest you consider
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�K'
Tuesday, May 10, 1966

ji JTJ31
SPECTRUM

H3T

PAGE ELEVEN

Text of Furnas' Statement on GFC5S And Selective Service
The following is the

from Pres. Furnas

Open Forum

statement
to the

read

Thursday evening

by Dr. A. Westley Rowland.
forum was sponsored by the

The
Student Senate and the CFCSS.

This statement i§ for the purpose of defining a problem and
clarifying issues and is not a defense of administrative action. A
group, named the Graduate-Faculty Committee on the Selective
Service, had apparently been
formed as the result of scheduling voluntary tests to be made
available by Selective Service for
the purpose of obtaining factual
information on students of draft
age who wish to request deferment, These tests are to be administered by a non-profit organization, _ Science Research Associates, which is under a contract
with the appropriate Federal
Government agency tor carrying
out such tests throughout the entire nation. Tests scheduled on
this campus, Canisius College and
at the State University College at
Buffalo are on May 21 and June
3.

On April 29 I received a com
munication from the above-men
tioned committee stating:

"Please consider the following
alternatives to your present plans
concerning the Test.
“(1) That the University not
lend its facilities to the Selective
Service for the administration of
the Test.
“(2) That a ‘disclaimer’ be attached to each examination stating that the University is opposed
to the imposition of the Selective
Service upon its jurisdiction and
is concerned with attempts by the
Selective Service to make it an
administrative arm of the military.

“We would like to discuss these
alternatives with you at 10 a.m.
Monday, May 2, 1966. The Graduate-Faculty Committee on the
Selective Service has invited interested undergraduates to take
part in these discussions.”
As requested, I did meet with
a committee. Frank and open discussion followed, during which I
stated that I would not accede to
either one of their requests since
by doing so I would be derelict
in my responsibilities for the
sound administration of this University. At 3 p.m. on May 2, while
a number of persons were sitting
in

the hallway outside

of

ray

of-

fice, two representatives of the
Committee requested to see me
and presented me with the following document:
“The following is the text of a
telegram sent to Dean Martin
Meyerson and to President Samuel Gould;”

Martin Meyerson will be
my successor as President of the
University at Buffalo on September 1, 1966, and Samuel Gould is
President of the State University
of New York),
“The Graduate-Faculty Committee on the Selective Service
met with President Furnas this
morning to ask him to address a
(Dean

University-wide public meeting
on the issue of the University's
decision to administer the Selective Service examination on campus. The President refused categorically. At the moment a group
of undergraduates, graduate students and teaching assistants are
sitting in President Furnas' anteroom. They will remain until he
accedes to the request for this
meeting, or until they are forcibly removed. We ask you to urge
President Furnas to accede to our
request and for you yourself to
take part in the ensuing public
meeting.”
In my interpretation, this document represented throwing down
the gauntlet against the person

has the responsibility and
authority for operating this University, so, naturally, I did not
accede to their demands. Hence,
who

the sit-in proceeded, I would like
to point out that this particular
demonstration was carried out in
an orderly manner and I have no
complaints about the behavior of
those who were involved.

On Tuesday. May 3, the Student
Senate called a special meeting
to consider the situation and, as
the authorized undergraduate student body on the campus, proposed to call an open meeting of
the academy community. Mr.
Clinton Deveaux, President of the
Undergraduate Student Association. presented me with a resolution reporting the results of that
meeting, which included requesting my attendance. I informed
Mr. Deveaux that while I appreciated the invitation. I still would
not attend the—meeting because
the basic impelling force back
of the event had risen from the
pressure of an authorized group
and hence it was not appropriate
for me to attend.

In

later conversations I informed representatives of the
Graduate-Faculty Committee on
the Selective Service that my decision not to attend the meeting
still stood, but that I would be
willing to prepare a written statement which could be read at the
meeting which, as I understand,
is now to be on Thursday evening, May 5. Subsequently the
sit-in group withdrew from the
hall way of my office.
Basic issues are involved here
and should be delineated. The
first of these is the definition of
a university The simplest and
most comprehensive definition of
a university that I know of is “An
institution devoted to the advancement of human knowledge.”
The corollary of this definition is
that the institution engages in
instruction, research and public
service. There are further implications of such an institution in
that it exists for the purpose of
public well-being
it does not
exist merely for the benefit of
one individual or small group.
Anything that is deleterious to
the whole structure is not in the
public interest and, hence, is not
fitting for a university.
—

The second important factor is
that we are one segment of a
great nation which has the overriding authority of all the citizens and all the institutions. This
is the United States qf__Amenca.
and the basic issues of its authority were decided in the Constitutional Convention of 1787.
The

the United States, as a convenience for those students who wish
to take it No one has to take the
test. It is not mandatory. But
certainly this would be a gross
infringement on the personal
freedom of the individual. As a
mat.ter of fact, it would definitely
be an infringement on the rights
of those students who desire to
take the test if they were to be
denied the opportunity by the
actions of another group of students.
To place this whole matter in
perspective, it is important to remember that on this campus students have enjoyed a wide range
of freedoms. May I recall to your
memories that this University Administration as well as the Board
of Trustees of State University
of New York, was insistent two

years ago that controversial
speakers have a right to speak on
this campus.

The Student Senate and the
Graduate Student Association, as
authorized representatives of the
student body, have the freedom
to act on matters directly related
to student welfare.

The student

newspaper. The

Spectrum, enjoys fredom of the
press, possibly even more than
does the general public media.
The University Administration
does not censor this publication
although it certainly does have
the right not to agree with everything that is printed in that pub-

lication.

of that leadership rest squarely
on the university president.”
Although some persons may
disagree with this, certainly for
—

the modern American university
this is the best and most succinct
statement that I have seen. In
my opinion, these are very sound
guidelines.

In order to round out the picture of the role of the president
in the operation of a university,
I feel it is best to refer to the
words of an experienced and recognized scholar in this field. The
following is an excerpt from a
statement in the New York Times
(Sunday, November 7, 1965, page
K-m which summarizes a series
of lectures on "The University
in Transition" which had been
given by a prominent university
president.
"The idea that a democratic
coalition of students, faculty and
administration can manage the
Riant enterprise is an illusion.
The idyllic image of the university as an autonomous and independent oasis
apart from sociely
is a mirage
The burden
—

..

Obviously, I must be and am
perfectly wiling to give due consideration to honest and sincere
opinions and requests which arise
from either faculty or students
through approved channels of the
University as a whole. These recognized channels include the following bodies: The Faculty Senate. the Graduate-Senate Association, and the Student Senate.
In summary, I believe that the
administration of a university
should be sensitive to sincere and
well-eonsidercd concerns of the
university faculty and students
for changes which arc legal and
appropriate in our dynamic,

changing society.

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Selective Service Act is

one segment of the implementation of that authority.

The decision to give the Selective Service examination on this
campus was an administrative
one, which has been made by
hundreds of colleges and universities of the nation. At various
administrative levels this University makes hundreds of such decisions every day which affect the
program, activities and individual members of the academic
community.
by its
public nature cooperates with a
large number of State, Federal,
and private agencies. In this particular case, Selective Service is
the law of the land, and in this
instance, a Federal Law. In giving this test on the campus, the
University is cooperating with
the Federal Government as it
does in many other ways. In fact,
many students arc studying at
this University today because of
funds made available to them
through the Federal Government.
Every year we have had the Peace
Corps representative on our campus and recently VISTA spent
several days with us.

The

State

University

The test is being given here
and in many other locations in

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�PAGE TWELVE

Lm* week's demonstrations demanded effective student and faculty
"in-put" In administration's decision making. The week's events included a 40-hour "sit-in" in Hayes Hall Monday and Tuesday, a resultant open meeting with administrators Thursday evening and a
spontaneous student picket and Rally Friday evening.
(other pictures Pg. 1)

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, May 10, 1966

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                    <text>ESTUL Eb

EXTRA
■-'’

*

jy ;&lt;•“..

*

•■■'•

.

■

■

•

VOLUME 16

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, MONDAY, MAY 9, 1966

H0
————————

Editorial C^om

47~*

-

■ftr.

I

■khps

A Tradition
In all phases of its institi
has made freedom its watch
themselves for a profession mi
tain specific bodies of knowlei
tain techniques, and the univ&lt;
fessional curricula which cons
studies. But at that point w:
Beyorid that point is open com
only environment proper to a u
and above a group of professional schools. It is an
is a forum of criticism and
intrepretation; it is an incubator of ideas. It is a
nursery of free men, and as
such it is democracy’s
strongest bulwark.
Free men are not reared
in leading strings. Only by
exercising the prerogatives
and the responsibilities of
freedom do men learn to
be free and to be strong.
This is what academic
freedom means. At the university of Buffalo it has
never been invaded.
If at any time these policies have required justification here or elsewhere, that time is surely not now.
For if this troubled world is to recover a measure of
justice and order, if those high privileges for which
America has fought are to be retained and extended, it
can only be through the united efforts of men and
women with informed and untrammeled minds; men and
women, thousands of them in all parts of the land, who
do not think in stereotypes, who are afraid neither of
new ideas nor fresh evidence, who have learned what
freedom means at freedom’s front, and who dedicate
their wills and their energies to its preservation. That
you may equip yourselves to play your individual parts
in this crucial task of our time, I welcome you into the
fellowship of this now venearble university.
Chancellor Samuel P. Capen
The University of Buffalo

3 October 1946

reporter after meeting.

Dr. Ebert stands to left.

President Calls Special Meeting
Reconsideration off Test Possible

A special meeting of the Executive Committee of the University Faculty Senate was held
Saturday afternoon. Invited were
Clinton Deveaux, and Kim Harrow
President and Vive-President of
the Student Senate. Dr. Norman
Lazarus and Ronald Stein represented the Graduate Student
Association. The meeting adopted
the following resolutions:
PROPOSAL 1
Whereas this ad hoc committee
recognizes legitimate concerns
felt by faculty and students in
this university with respect to
their participation in academic
policy and
Whereat such concerns relate

to the immediate need which this

committee recognizes of opening
and maintaining a dialogue between faculty and students and
administration groups, now therefore this ad hoc committee recommends that the president

name:

1. A special task force committee whose mandate shall be to

inquire Into and make proposals
with respect to establishing an
open and
continual dialogue
among such groups.

2. To make such proposals as
they deem appropriate regarding
organizational means for participation by these groups in the formulation of educational policy in
the university.
PROPOSAL 2
In response to Resolution 1,
the president has appointed the
following committee and directed
that three additional student
members be added to the committee namely two undergraduate students to be leoted by the
student senate and one graduate
student to be elected by the graduate student association.
Prof. Ebert, chairman
Sapp
Murray

Hawkland
Hunt
Mr, Devoe
Dr. Lazarus (10)
ACTION 3
The ad hoc committee recommended that the faculty senate
executive committee meet in special session to consider immediately the matter of holding the
S. S. Test on the UB campus.
ACTION 4
At a special meeting of the

executive committee of the uni-

versity faculty senate held at
5:25 p.m., May 7, 1966 in the of-

fice of the President called by
President Furnas to consider the
matter of bolding the S. S. Examination on the university cam’
pus, the President advised tfce
executive committee that &lt;tw
matter as to hold the test on tfca
campus was not necessarily a
closed one.
Thereupon the executive committee recommended that the
President at the earliest possible
opportunity meet in joint session
with and consult with the executive committee of the faculty senate, the executive committee of
the student senate and the executive committee of the faculty
senate in order to review Iba
university’s decision in regard to
this matter. The President concurred with this resolution.
ACTION 5
The ad hoc committee then considered a student petition demanding immediate and posMWaction by the President changing
overall oplicy and structure fagr
6 p.m. Sunday. This demand wee

rejected.

Pickets Protest President's Stand
tions end, some 300 persons had
participated.
Observers noted that this demonstration was the largest in the
history of this university.
The picket then moved to the
fountain, but was quickly moved
outward to the adjacent sidewalk
bordering Lockwood Library to
accomodate the rapidly-enlarging

An emergency meeting was
called Friday morning at 10 a.m.
bp the executive committee of
the Graduate-Faculty Committee
on the Selective Service (GFCSS)
to discuss immediate tactical
problems resulting from the
stand taken by administration
representatives the night before.
It was decided that a demonstration would follow the meeting. Sociology graduate student
Rick Salter acted as chairman.
Members of the committee
stressed that the meeting was
called to decide only what to do
that afternoon. They added that
the meeting's purpose was not
to provide policy for the group,
but only to discuss possibilities
for action that afternoon.
Graduate student and committee fnember Fred Ostroy disclosed that three items for consideration were proposed at the
meeting.

These

1—Throw

were:
up a picket

crowd.

An informal counterpicket began spontaneously on the Nor-

ton steps facing the fountain.

at Hayes

Picket Line Cover*

Hall immediately following the
meeting.

2—Move in on and close Hayes
Hall by blocking all entrances to
the buiding.
3—Close any other building
and/or buildings deemed practicable by the committee.
After a two-hour debate among
the estimated 350 persons in attendance at the meeting, it was
decided that a demonstration at
Hayes Hall would be set up immediately.
Following the emergency meeting, temporary committees which

were set up by the GFCSS the
night before met to implement
the tactical objectives decided at
the meeting. The Publicity Committee, headed by Dave Gardnier
reportedly set to work making
signs that were to be used in the

demonstration.
Other

committees

that

met

were the Student Committee
chaired by Diane Garvey, whose

purpose was to encourage additional student support, and a

Campus

like purpose Faculty Committee
co-headed by Susan Orlofsky and
Dorothy

Frankenstein.

Set Up at Hayes
At the same time it was reported that an estimated 150

immediately proceeded
to Hayes Hall to begin the dem-

persons

onstration. GPCSS member Peter
Rubin said that the number of
demonstrators swelled to some
persons within the first half
hour, and that by the demonstra-

A dialogue then began between
leaders of the GFCSS and counterpickets. Committee member
Salter and others attempted to
explain the purpose of the demonstration, which was allegedly
to force the administration to
reopen discussion on the issue
of giving the Selective Service
College Qualifying Test, to the
counter-demonstrators.
At about 2 p.m. the demonstrators moved out of the quadrangle and headed toward Goodyear and Clement Halls. The procession was headed by GFCSS
member Larry Faulkner.
Haraasad
While the demonstrators were
crossing the road between NoNrton and Cooke Halls, a car broke
through the picket line carrying
several demonstrators with it. No
injuries were reported and the
■license number of the car was
taken. Demonstrator Kenneth
Cumberland was hit by the car
as i broke through the picket line,
but was unhurt. It was reported

that

he would

decide

Monday

morning whether or not to preaa
charges.
As the procession passed Tower Hall, plastic bags filled with
water were burled at the pieheters by residents of the men's
dormitory. Although several
demonstrators were drencbad,
no injuries were disclosed.
The picketers stopped at Goodyear and Clement Halls, where
GFCSS committee members Being bull horns, informed the rw-

idents of these dormitories of
the purpose of the demonstrsfiM.
The marchers then proceeded
to return to the quadrangle.
When the procession passed by
the other side of Tower Hall,
water bags were again tossed at
the group. Several demonstrators
were soaked, but, as before,
there were no reported injerlsa.
When the group arrived neck
at the quadrangle, they proceeded to march around the fountain.
After about fifteen miaedaS,
GFCSS leader Rick Salter called
the group together for a rally by
the fountain He informed tie
group that the demonstration was
about to end. The Publicity Committee began collecting the signs,
Salter reminded the group In attend the 7 p.m. meeting that bed
been called earlier that day, and
urged all demonstrators te bring
as many people to the mesthv
with them as possible
Following the singing of “We
Shall Overcome." the demonstrators dispersed.

�SPECTRUM

Monday, May 9, 1966

Mass Rally Adopts Sit-In
At a Mass Rally Friday night

AAUP Opposes Aid
By University to S.S.
At a SUNY at Buffalo chapter
of the American Association of
University Profesors meeting
Friday, May 6, three resolutions
concerning administrative policy

were passed.
The resolutions

are:

Whereas matters which direct-

ly affect the nature of the academic community are not only
admjnisl native, but also academic
Whereas an academic
community demands the free in-

concerns;

terchange of ideas;

•f it resolved, that the question of the use of SUNY at Buffalo facilities for conducting the
Selective Service Examination be
reopened for discussion by faculty, students, and administration,
and that a resolution of the question be obtained by intellectual
inquiry involving all segments of
the academic community mutual

Be

it therefore resolved that
the university shall in no way
lend its facilities to the Selective
Service for the administration of
any draft deferment examination.
We urge the administration of
this university to declare that it
is our official policy to di'close
neither the grades nor the quartile standing of any student to
the Selective Service without the
specific request of the students.

Dr. Marvin Zimmorman of the

Philosophy Department left the
meeting early. He said the reso1 u t i o n s were being “steamrollered” through. When asked
what was the significance of the
AAUP, Dr Zimmerman replied,
“It’s not a very representative
group. There’s only 50 of them
here.” There are approximately
400 AAUP members, it was re-

ly.

ported.

Wharaas the proper function of
this university is that of education, and Whereas the student
draft deferment examination soon
to be administered by this university serves no educative end,
end

Mr. Bill Harrell of the Sociology Department stated, “Dr.

Whereat the voluntary participation of this university in the

administration of the examination
m«ar court the impression that the
faculty and student bodies lend
their implicit moral support both
tQ-the examination and the uses
t«| Which it may be put, such an
irepression being contrary to the
options and values of a significant number of stude-m is ani
faculty.

THE

Zimmerman's conclusion is not
valid. All of the resolutions were
discussed although there was
some confusion because they were
not discussed In the order they
were passed. The meeting was
asked if it felt the resolutions
were sufficiently discussed and it
did. Parliamentary procedure was
followed. A quorum was present.”

Mr. Harrell continued, “Zim-

merman supported the first

lution

reso-

he did not objeot to its
being brought to a vote. Consequently, it is difficult to undertutldhs as being
steamrollered.”

SPECTRUM

JEREMY TAYLOR
RAYMOND D. VOLPE

Manager

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff— Loretta Angelina. Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen Green,
Pater Lederman, Joan Roberts, Rick Schwab, Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman,
Eilaan Taitler, Nancy Toder, Patti Wartley, Judy Weisberg.
Nature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
•MB—Bonnie Bartow, Ron Ellsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb,
Audray Logo), Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack. William Weinstein.
Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Staff— Mike Castro. Mike Dolan, Steve Farbman, Bob Frey, Scott Forman,
J. B. Sharcot.
Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
tUi Joanne Bouchier. Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman.
Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Becker. Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern, Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer,
'
Claire Shottenfeld, Susan Zuckerberg.
Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
•Terry Angelo, Audrey Cash. Pat Rosenfeid, Steve Silverman, Joseph
Photography

Editor

JOSCELYN
Feyes, Carol Goodson,

EDWARD

•a#—Don Blank. Peter Bonneau, Joseph
Mari Levine, Ivan Makuch, Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk,
Hobart Wynne
Circulation Manager
DIANE LEWIS
Faculty Advisor
IRENE RICH
Financial Advisor
DALLAS GARBER

Gruber,
Susan Wortman,
Alan

*

Hr*

ally regarded as a major policy
decision, we request that all cooperation with the Selective Service System be suspended until a
policy is determined as called
for in our proposal.”
A resolution of principles was
also passed stating that the “main-

tenance

of the academic community is the direct responsibility of all members of that community and that the administration of this University has abandoned its responsibility to protect
the rationale of responsible scholarship and its responsibility to
all the members of the academic
community.”

It calls for a meeting of “members of the University administration empowered to determine University policy with all interested
members of the academic community to arbitrate the grievances
which precipitated the calling of
this meeting. The resolution continues, “This body shall attempt
to halt the arbitrary actions of
the administration until such
time as they recognize their
responsibility to the entire academic community."

The third resolution passed was
in support of the Association of
American University Professors
(AAUP) decision that “the question of the use of SUNYAB facilities for conducting the Selective
Service Examination be reopened
for discussion by faculty, students,, and administration, and
that a resolution of the question
be obtained by intellectual inquiry involving all segments of
the academic community mutually.”

The three resolutions will be

presented to Dr. Furnas. If he
refuses or does not reply by 6
p.m. Sunday the sit-in will take
place.
The scheduled time for the sitin to start is 7;45 a.m. Pieketers
will also start marching at this
time in front of Hayes Hall.

Chairman of the GSA

Mr. Nor-

man Lazarus announced, the
‘GSA will throw all its available

resources behind GFCSS. Since

Dr. Rowland seemed repudiating
any guarantee by Dr. Furnas that

the students would be listened to,

a letter will be sent to Dr. Fumas
asking him to clarify his posi-

tion.”
A letter sent to Dr. Furnas was
signed by the Committee for Victory in Vietnam, Young Americans for Freedom, and Students
for United States in Vietnam, calling for a referendum on the administration of the Selective Servive Exam on campus.
YAF President Steve Sickler,
asserted, “We think the referendum should be given because we
feel GFCSS as a minority raised
an issue. They went to Furnas
and were refused.”
Mr. Sickler felt the resolution
to test the draft issue by putting
it through the Senate was “a
cheap attempt to bypass the students, The Student Senate has already passed a resolution to keep
the Selective Service Exam from
being administered on campus.
The leadership of this movement
likes to confuse the two issues in

a calculated effort to make the

draft issue the issue.”
Dr. Larue of the Classics Department announced that -a petition would be circulated “to as
many faculty members as we can
reach This will be personally
carried to Furnas’ office.”
Dr. Kahn, associate professor
in the Classics Department, affirmed the fights of the minority.
“The question is not if a majority
of faculty and students are opposed to the Selective Service
test on campus but that a significant number were disturbed and
wanted to discuss it. There are
the rights of the minority to be
protected within the tradition.”
Members of the GPCSS Executive Committee Larry Faulkner
said, “Dean Meyerson should be
kept in touch with what’s going
on. We should not just send telegrams but we should be heard,
when Dean Meyerson takes office,
on all issues that affect us. If we
get a sit-in there will be no question in Dean Meyerson’s mind that
we mean business.”
Dr, Larue urged, “The administration always gives less than
what you ask for so ask, my
friends, ask, ask, ask .
GFCSS Executive Committee
member Jim Hart asserted, “We
should be considered in those
questions which directly influence
our lives. When I say that, I mean
exactly that, life.”
Jim Hansen of the GFCSS Executive Committee said, “I’m not
questioning the administration’s
right to administer but the way
they cannot be reviewed. It is a
matter of principle to be able to
talk to the administration, or at
least have them talk to us. Now
there are no avenues, no provisions for such things."
Mrs, Wheila Rhodes of the Philosophy Department stated that
“Whether or not you are against
the Selective Service Exam is irrelevant. We should add all the
grievances arising from the inability to hear us.”
.

Draft Test On Campus?

—

Tha official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo. N. Y. 14214.
RuWUh.d twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
except for exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.

Business

called by the Graduate Faculty
Committee on the Selective Service (GFCSS) a course of action
was decided upon to gain channels for the redress of grievances.
This Monday there will be a
sit-in at Hayes Hall in the event
that President Fumas does not
accede to a resolution, adopted at
the rally, giving the Faculty-Senate the ultimate power to determine University policy.
Included in this resolution is
that “Students should be empowered to make policy proposals by
means of a referendum or a vote
of the Senate and/or the Graduate Student Association (GSA).
Such student proposals shall be
adopted as official policy unless
reversed by a 2/3 vote of the
Faculty Senate.”
Since the draft issue is “gener-

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class Postage Paid at Buffalo, N. Y.
Subscription
$3.00 per year,
circulation
15.000.
Represented
for national advertising by
National Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New Yorfc. N. Y.

An open forum, eo-sponsored
by the Student Association and
the Graduate-Faculty Committee
on the Selective Service, was held
last Thursday in the Fillmore
Room. The discussion evolved out
of the controversy surrounding
the University decision to administer the Selective Service
examination on campus.
Dr. A. Westley Rowland, assistant to the President, and Mr.

Allen Kuntz, who decided initial-

ly that SUNYAB facilities should
be made available for the exam,
represented the Administration
in the two-hour-long debate.
Mr. Gene Larue and Mr, Larry

Faulkner, both members of the

Graduate-Faculty Committee, Student Senate Vice-President Kim
Darros and Dan Rotholz were the
formal representatives of all those
who are opposed to current University policy concerning the
draft. Clinton Deveaux, President
of the Student Association, was

moderator.
Dr. Rowland presented a statement prepared by Dr. Furnas
stating the rationale behind the
Administration's stand in the current crisis and defining the roles
of students, faculty members and
administrative staff members regarding University policy. The
text will appear tomorrow in the
Spectrum.

Mr. Kuntz, in his opening statement, explained that the decision
he had made was compatible with
long-established precedent and offered to answer questions concerning either that precedent

“and/or my credentials.”
Dan Rotholz read the Senate
Resolution passed on Wednesday,

Clinton

Deveaux moderates Selective Service discussion.
May Fourth, in which it was proposed that the University 1) not
send academic records to the Selective Service unless requested
•to do so by the individual stu-

dent and

2)

not lend its facilities

to the Selective Service for the

administration of the deferment
exam

Kim Darrow, commenting on
Dr. Furnas’ statement observed
that, when defining an academic
community, it is necessary to remember that “Knowledge is not
enough.” Referring to Dr. Kuntz'
words, he stated that the question at hand was not “who?” but
“why?”

Mr. Larue read, as an opening,
a memorandum dated May third,
in which deans were urged to
persuade graduate students to
register for the draft exemption

exam.

Observing that that memo
smelled of official policy, he
called for commitment" on the
part of those dean, professors
and administrative staff members
who, until then, had merely expressed their “concern.”
He
emphasized the necessity for taking sides on the issue and said
that non-action evinced “hostility
to a desire for change.”
Larry Faulkner remarked that,
although some might consider it
“convenient to give the test on
campus, the retention of automony is more important than convenience of location.” He reminded those present that the
university has always decided for
itself who is educational material
and stated that the University is
“not only allowing that pattern to
change,” but “encouraging it to

happen.”
An open question and answer
period folowed during which Dr.
Rowland and Mr. Kuntz were
questioned repeatedly concerning
possible willingness on the part
of the administration to reevaluate its position. Dr. Rowland stated several times that the decision

had been made and would not be
changed and neither
Dr. Rowland
nor Mr. Kuntz seemed to think
that it infringed in any way upon
University autoraony.
Closing statements made by
panel members seemed to indicate that more effective means
of communication would have to
be found before any kind of settlement could be reached. Dr.
Rowland concluded by saying that
‘'whatever the Selective Service
regulations are, the University
will enforce them,”

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

_J

—-A

STATE

TENNIS

—

directory

award

I

(See Page

VOLUME 16

I

(See Page II)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1966

NO 44

Senate Opposes On Campus Test
A resolution opposing the administration of the Selective Service Exam on campus and sending
academic records to the draft
board was passed at the last Senate meeting of the year Wednes-

day night.

Miss Ellen Cardone was appointed temporary chairman of
the Student Senate Activities
Committee until next fall. The
reason for this was the lack of
time needed to interview the
candidates for the chairmanship.
This will be done in the fall.
The amendment to provide for

SDS Member Lists
Kept From FBI

Joel Gershowiti proposes Selective Service resolution

Photo by Carol Goodson

New Professor of Air Science
Comes to Campus July 15

At Wesleyan, Stanley Idzerda,
dean of the college, said an FBI
agent had asked him two weeks
ago for the names of all students
in the college’s SDS chapter and
had been refused such data. Idzerta said the college kept no
such lists and “we consider the
student's activity his own affair.”
•’It is unfortunate,” he added,
“that a climate of suspicion can
can be created by such activities
that might lead students to be
more circumspect than the situation requires. Things like this
fre' -id
-&gt;

Colonel John J. Herbert, Jr.,
currently Director of NATO
Weapon School, wil arrive at UB
July 15th to assume the duties
of Profesor of Aerospace Studies
for the 575th ROTC Detachment.

student recall

of Senators

the Law School.
Selective Service Debate
Senator Joe Gershowitz, who
proposed the resolution, asserted,
“The integrity of the University
is at stake. Maintenance of this
integrity is worth a short walk
to Hayes Hall. There is nothing
to keep the student from requesting his grades and sending them
to the draft board.
Treasurer Carl Levine affirmed, “A student's grades are his
personal property. The government shall not infringe on a student’s personal property." Mr.
Levine said that he does not
believe students should "have to
go all the way downtown” to take
the Selective Service Test.
“Allowing the students to take
the test on campus is a service
muchc the same as providing ap-

plications for a 2S deferment for
the student." Senator Daniel
Rotholz said that by accepting
the test on campus we “accept
the administration's decision as
fair. We accept the validity of
the criteria used by the draft

board.”
This resolution was passed;
Whereas, it is the traditional
power of the University to set
its own standards for membership in the academic community,
and
Whereas, the University would
abdicate this power by a) con-

senting to automatically supply
the Selective Service with grades
and academic record, and, b) consenting to lend its facilities to
the Selective Service for the administration of a draft deferment

examination, therefore, be it resolved that the Student Senate
proposes:

1. That the University shall not

send the academic record of
the student unless specifically requested to do so by
the individual student to the
Selective Service.
2. That the University shall in
no way lend its facilities to
the Selective Service for the
administration of the deferment examination.

Dr. Z. Brzezinski to Speak
At 4.00, Monday in Norton
One of the Outstanding Young
Men of 1963, Zbigniew

K. Brzezinski, will speak in the Conference Theater Monday, May 9, at
4 p.m. Prof. Brzezinski is the Director of the Research Institute
on Communist Affairs and a Professor of Public Law and Government of the Russian Institute,
both of Columbia University.

A 23-year Air Force veteran,
Colonel Herbert comes to the
university bearing impressive credentials. As a B-25 pilot in World
War H he flew 51 combat missions and received numerous decorations including the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Air
Medal with 4 Oak Leaf Clusters,
and both Air Force and Army
Commedation Medals.

in General Education from the
University of Omaha, and he has
attended the folowing service
schools: Air Command and Staff
College, Academic Instructor
School, and Pilot Training School.
It was at the Air Command and
Staff College from 1958 to 1963
that Colonel Herbert held the
position of Academic Instructor.
This summer the Colonel will

the

was defeated. The vote of all 18
of the Senators present was necessary to ratify the amendment;
there was one dissenting vote.
The Dean of Students has only
to choose its two candidates to
complete the membership of the
Student Judiciary for next year.
The Senate ratified the appointment of Mr. Bruce Goldstein and
Mr, Dennis Hall.
Dr. Furnas’
choice was Mr. Willard Myers of

Prof. Brzezinski was born in
Warsaw, Poland, in 1928, emigrated to the United States, and
is now an American citizen. In
1949 he received his bachelor's

degree from McGill University
and was awarded first honors in
both Economics and Political Science. He was granted his mas-

leave his current assignment in
Germany, and come to UB to fill
the position vacated by Lt. Col.
Huddleston who was PAS of the
575th Detachment for four years.
In the interim, Lt. Col. Ozenick
wii serve as UB’s Professor of
Aerospace Studies.

The FBI office in New Haven
said its files were confidential
and it would be unable to disclose
the exact nature of its investigation. An FBI spokesman also denied charges circulated at Yale
and Wesleyan that agents had
questioned the roommates of Yale
SDS members.

Capen, Cooke Awards
Presented at Banquet
The Walter P. Cooke Award
and the Samuel P. Capen Award
will be presented at the Alumni
Association’s annual awards and
installation banquet tomorrow at
the Cordon Bleu Restaurant at
6 p.m.
The Cooke Award is presented
to a non-alumnus
whose service to the University
is “of such magnitude it clearly
calls for outstanding recognition."

periodically

Former football coach Richard
Offenhamer will be awarded a
special citation of appreciation
on behalf of the alumni.

to r Ronny

AIPI ratlroo P.IHowiti trophy. L Intramural
Stov Schulman, Stov. Waloh. S~

eh Mut *'

HjjJ

.

,

Following installation of the
Association’s General Alumni
Board officers, the Annual Alumni Spring Dance will be held.

ter’s and doctor's degrees from
Harvard in 1950 and 1953.

Dr. Brzezinski served as an
Instructor of Government and a
research fellow at the Russian
Research Center and the Center
for International Affairs at Harvard in 1953 and was promoted
to the rank of Assistant Professor in 1956. In 1960 he was
transferred to Columbia University with the status of Associate
Professor and has since achieved
the rank of full Professor.
Dissatisfied with confining his
achievements to the academic
community, Prof. Brzezinski was
a consultant to the Research
Program on the U.S.S.R. in New
York from 1953-54, is a member
of t,he Joint Committee on Contemporary China of the Social
Science Research Council, the
Council on Foreign Relations, and
a Constultant to the RAND Corporation.
Assisting the U.S. government,
he was the study co-ordinator and
principal author of the paper
“Ideology and Foreign Affairs,"
a report presented to the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee in
1959, and he is presently a consultant to the State Department.
In addition to receiving several grants for research in the field
of Communist affairs, Prof. Bne

ZBIGNIEW K. BRZEZINSKI

zinski was honored as a Social
Science Research Fellow in 1957.
He was the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1960. and
was selected by the U.S. Jaycees
as one of America’s Ten Outstanding Young Men of the Year
in 1963.

He is a prolific writer and has
an impressive series of books
to complement his articles appearing in various periodicals,
such as Foreign Affairs, The
American Political Science RePolitics, and China
Quarterly. He is the author of
Political Controls in the Soviet
Army, published in 1954; The
view, World

Politics in
Permanent Purge,
Soviot Totalitarianism, published
in 1956: and Tho Soviet Bloc—
Unity and Conflict, published in
I960 and recently revised to include an epilogue on the SinoSoviet dispute. The volumes were
all written for the Russian Research Center,
His works also include Ideology and Power in Soviet Politics,
a collection of essays, published
in 1962; and Alternative to Partition; For a Broader Conception
of America's Role in Europe,
printed last year for the Council
on Foreign Relations. He is coauthor of Totalitarian Dictatorship and Autocracy.
—

�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

Snags Develop in Interim Campus Construction

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outlines

-V

ANNOUNCING

Rapid expansion of the university in the past several years
has brought many administrative
problems to the students’ attention. One of the most pressing
problems on the campus is that

of space for' classrooms, offices,
research, and staffs.

Due to the recent inflation of
student enrollment, the faculty
has increased, and the university
now proposes further enlargement of its undergraduate classes.
The great strain upon existing
physical facilities, and the fact
that the university has used the
maximum permissible amount of
building space allowed by the
state, restricts continued building
of the Butler Building, unless
permenent structures are removed.

Many One of a Kind at Unheard of Savings!

To provide for the proposed
increase in students and faculty,
the university has sought offcampus space as a remedy. The
administration proposes that certain academic departments be
Main St. campus and housed in
larger space elsewhere.

Harlem at Main Street

Since the master plan for the
new campus has not been completed, it is impossible to build
on that site. Therefore, the administration proposes that the
departments be housed elsewhere.

NEW YORK COMES TO BUFFALO

Showroom Samples of Women's
Apparel from Leading Fashion Houses

Tack Pharmacy Bldg.

Friday, May 6, 1966

in

has asked

contractors to build office facilities in the Town of Amherst on
Niagara Falls Blvd., about five

miles from campus. Unfortunately, the contractors have refused
to build unless they are able to
convert the university structures
into commercial shopping establishment after the university
vacates

The Amherst Town Board has
refused to zone the area as commercial land, preventing the university contractors from building,
and a petition by area residents
asking that the school be prevented from building in Amherst has
been circulated. The decision of
the Town Board was based on the
unfinished Town of Amherst master plan which will prevent spot
zoning until July.
The Ad Hoc Student Committee on the Interim Campus has
suggested alternatives to the
splitting of the student body and
university’s faculty. They feel
that students attending some
classes will be denied a great part
of campus life. Even with shuttle

transportation, students would
have little opportunity to spend
time on the present campus.

The committee proposes that no
academic departments be isolat-

ed from the main campus, and
that a more equitable solution be
found. The administration has
intimated that it will listen to
student proposals, but exact information on building and rental
costs has been withheld from students. Since the new campus master plan is now two years behind
schedule, the administration must
soon find a way to ease the space
strain.

Chennault Drill Society
Merges with Arnold Air
The Chennualt Drill Society
used profits from last week’s
pizza sale to participate in the
Northeastern Invitational Drill
Meet in Boston April 28 and 29.
According to member Paul
Kopycinski, the society sold 500
pizzas, netting $250 to support
the society.
The Drill Society has effected
a merger with the Arnold Air
Society to strengthen the organization, Mr. Kopycinski said. The
new Arnold Air Society will be
able to assume a larger role conducting the ROTC leadership program next semester and supporting such civic functions as the
Annual Blood Drive and the Military Ball.

Snyder, New York
Phona: 839-1277

Take your good time
going home.

Eastern via Florida.
Florida swings in the spring —but it really swings in the summer.
Lower off-season room rates are in effect. And Eastern will take you to
Daytona or Ft. Lauderdale or even Miami for half-fare.
So take a detour and enjoy it on your way home. Or go home first and down

to Florida later.
Just use your Eastern Youth ID card, or similar card from another airline. If
you don't have such a card, it's a snap to get one —provided you're under 22
and can prove it. For the specifics, stop by a Travel Agent or any Eastern ticket

office.
Once you have your card, you can get an Eastern Jet Coach seat for half
fare. You can't make an advance reservation. But if there's a seat available at
departure time, you can fly to any Eastern destination within the continental
U.S. Including Florida.

A eastern
mrnmm
■

N.Y. 1000

II

NUMBER ONE TO THE FUN

�U1;

fr*

.

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*»»Tl

Friday. May 6, 1966

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

AAUP to Appeal Feinberg Decision

On Campus AfeShuJman

When the University of Buffalo
joined the State University system in 1962, signing the Feinberg certificate became part of
the required acceptance procedure for the faculty.
The Certificate implements the
Feinberg Law which states, “Any
person who is a member of an
organization advocating the over-

(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys.'",

“Debit Gillis," etc.)

THE COLLEGE PRESIDENT:
HIS CAUSE AND CURE
Oh, sure, you’ve been busy, what with going to classes, doing
your homework, catching night crawlers, getting married,
picketing—byt can’t you pause for just a moment and give
thought to that dear, dedicated, lonely man in the big white
house on the hill? I refer, of course, to Prexy.
(It is interesting to note that college presidents are always called “Prexy.” Similarly, trustees are always called
“Trixie.” Associate professors are always called “Axy-Pixy.”
Bursars are called “Foxy-Woxy.” Students are called
“Algae.”J
But I digress. We were speaking of Prexy, a personage
at once august and pathetic. Why pathetic? Well, sir, consider how Prexy spends his days. He is busy, busy, busy.
He talks to deans, he talks to professors, he talks to trustees, he talks to alumni. In fact, he talks to everybody except the one group who could lift his heart and rally his
spirits. I mean, of course, the appealingest, endearingest,
winsomest group in the entire college—delightful you, the

students.

It is Prexy’s sad fate to be forever a stranger to your
laughing, golden selves. He can only gaze wistfully out the
window of his big white house on the hill and watch you at

your games and sports and yearn with all his tormented
heart to bask in your warmth. But how? It would hardly
be fitting for Prexy to appear one day at the Union, clad in
an old rowing blazer, and cry gaily, “Heigh-ho, chaps!
Who’s for sculling?”
No, friends, Pfexy can’t get to you. It is up to you to get
to him. Call on him at home. Just drop in unannounced. He
will naturally be a little shy at first, so you must put him at
his ease. Shout, “Howdy-doody, sir! I have come to bring a
little sunshine into your drear and blighted life!” Then
yank his necktie out of his vest and scamper goatlike
around him until he is laughing merrily along with you.
Then hand him a package and say, “A little gift for you,

sir.”

mldn’t

throw of the government of the
United States shall not be eligible
for employment in the public
schools of the state.”

Protests from the faculty and
from the American Association
of University Professors (AAUP)
have proclaimed that the Certificate violates principles of acaMAJ. ROY STEWART
demic freedom. They maintained
A ceremony was held April 19 that the Certificate violates "exto honor Major Roy Stewart who plicit and implied guarantees at
is leaving the ROTC facutly to the time of merger that UB facserve at Hickham Air Force Base, ulty would be accepted unconditionally.”
Honolulu, Hawaii.
Major Stewart teaches AeroPresident Furnas upheld the
space Studies 1 and 2. He said
Certificate.
that he will not be replaced since
enrollment in ROTC is no longer
In February, 1964, Harry Keymanditory.
ishian, who had refused to sign
At his new job, Major Stewart
the Certificate, was informed
reported that he will be working that he would not be reappointon staff operations. He commented to the UB faculty despite
ed that he is “glad to get back AAUP policy that teachers with
to the Air Force.”
three years of full-time employment (as in his case) are entitled
to one-year notice before disEverything Photographic for
missal.
Professional &amp; Amateur Use
When members of the UB faculty refused to sign the loyalty
oath as a condition for continued
employment, and were either dismissed or not reappointed, sevCamera*
Movie Rental*
eral
of them took the case to
Supplies
Projector*
to test the Feinberg Law's
court
Photo Finishing
validity. The Law’s constitutionality has consistently been upheld,
2635 Delaware Ave.
including the latest decision last
877-3317
January 5th.
The five plaintiffs in the Jan-

DELAWARE CAMERA
MART

uary 9th case have decided to
appeal to the Supreme Court. The
AAUP estimates that it wLU cost
about $3500 for court costs.
Appeals for funds to finance
the appeal have been sent to UB
faculty members and to other
AAUP chapters in the state. Contributions by UB students would
be appreciated by the AAUP.

Computer Program

For Grad. Placements
The UB Placement Service announced that it is establishing a
computerized program known as
Graduate Resume Accumulation
and Distribution (GRAD) to assist career-seeking alumni.
According to Placement Director Dr. C. James Lafkiotes, a
computer will match qualified
alumni having at least one year
of experience with participating
employers. The computer will be
provided by the College Placement Council (CPC), a non-profit
organization of college placement

directors.
Although the program initially will be limited to experienced
alumni seeking advanced positions in business and industry.

Lafkiotes noted the program may

eventually be extended to graduating students also.

Alumni interested in the program should contact the Placement Office in Schoellkopf Hall.

*

THE SPECTRUM

*

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But how about a blade that’s had hard and frequent use?
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Personna is no flash-in-the-pan. Like you, sir, Personna

abides.”

He will clasp your hand then, not trusting himself to

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still more good news to tell you of Personna!”
“How is that possible?” he will say.
“Hearken to me,” you will say. “Personna, in all its enduring splendor, is available not only in Double Edge style
but also in Injector style!"
then
He will join you then in the Personna rouser, and
he will bring you a steaming cup of cocoa with a marshre
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turn soon again to brighten your dank, miasmic life.can
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siblv manage it, try not to come at four in the morning.

~

*

#

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I'HMI.

Max Hhulman

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�SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Editorial (Comment

.

.

The

.

A Question of Clarification
A number of people for whom I have a great deal
of respect have come to me to tell me that yesterday’s
editorial “went too far”. Perhaps it did. Few people
have more reason to know that President Furnas has
supported academic freedom in the past than I have.
But to congratulate an educator for upholding academic
freedom is like congratulating an architect because the
buildings he designs didn’t fall down and kill people—in both cases the men are only doing what could reasonably be expected of them.
One congratulates an architect if his buildings are

beautiful, as well as functional, and one congratulates an
educator when his work is exceptional. I do not believe
that this university is exceptional, and if it is exceptional
—then the state of American higher education is even
worse than we could imagine.
The issue of university autonomy is crucial, and for
a chief administrator to ignore that problem is appalling.
President Furnas did just that. The appelatives used to
describe his arbitrary actions were strong—but our commitment to academic freedom and responsibility, and
university are also strong.

If my editorial gave President Furnas reason to reassess his position, then I feel justified in writing them,
but if they caused him personal discomfort—then I sincerely apoloize. I believe his actions were autocratic,
anti-educational, and extremely harmful to the university
community. •! believe his actions stemmed from pride
which was foolish, and that it is stupid to make decisions
which are so clearly detrimental to the goals of higher
education.

However, I have no desire to ridicule or disparage
the President as a man. I apologize if my words have
been reasonably open to that interpretation.

PrW»y, May

grump

This is going to be another
of those rainy Tuesday columns
in which V sort of rummage
around in my alleged mind and
get all sorts of little odds and
ends into order.
For example, I owe some sweet
young thing an apology. She called me last week to ask the name
of the establishment I mentioned
in Toronto. Being so astounded
that someone actually read the
column and remembered it I
was shocked into civility. We
chatted pleasantly for a few moments, 1 gave her what directions
and aid I could and we severed
the connection.
Then last Friday I went to
visit a friend in the hospital.
This was not the wisest and most
intelligent move I have ever
made. Hospitals tend to upset
me. I dislike being reminded of
the frailty of people either structurally or mentally. It has the
effect of reminding me that any
or all of the things that have
not happened to me so far are
not really under my control.
I have been outstandingly lucky in a variety of ways, and how
do you explain luck? EconomicSocial theories aside, in any culture you have people who are

blessed with luck and some who
aren’t, despite plaudits about hard
work and perserverance there is
something more occuring which
nobody

can really explain—but

it sounds much better to say “he
is lucky” than to say “he is
beloved of the Gods,” right?
Anyway hospitals as a group
tend to unnerve me, and I doubt

One criticism of society, according to our left-wing is that
it doesn’t provide for enough
direct democracy. The people, we
are told, ought to have more of
a voice in determining those who
speak for them. It is interesting
to note their reaction, however,
to proposals for accomplishing
this here at OB—such as electing the Chief Editor of the Spectrum. Horrors! Tyranny! Fascism!
If we are able to get past the
adjectives, we find that there

exists

THE

SPECTRUM

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

Business

RAYMOND 0. VOLPE

Manager

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Biff—Loretta Angelina, Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen Green,
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman,
Eileen Teitler, Nancy Toder, Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg.
Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Staff— Bonnie Bartow. Ron Ellsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb,
Audrey Logel, Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack, William Weinstein.
Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Staff—Mike Castro, Mike Dolan, Steve Farbman, Bob Frey, Scott Forman,
J.B. Shared
Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
in« Bouchier. Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman.
Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Hall- Carol Becker. Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpem, Sandy Lippman. Betsy Ozer,
Claire Shottenfeld, Susan Zuckerberg.
Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
BtalV—Terry Angelo, Audrey Cash, Pat Rosenfeld, Steve Silverman, Joseph
Mancini.

Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Stall—Don Blank, Peter Bonneau, Joseph Feyes, Carol Qoodson, Alan Gruber,
Marc Levine, Ivan Makuch, Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman,
Robert Wynne.
Circulation Manager
DIANE LEWIS
Faculty Advisor
IRENE.RICH
Financial Advisor
DALLAS GARBER
Photography

I

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

Second Class Postage

Subscription

$3.00

Paid at Buffalo. N. Y.
year, circulation
par

15,000.
Represented
for national advertising by
National Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madi-

son Ave., New York,

N. Y.

if anyone is as itchy when unnerved as I. So I picked my wife
up at work at IX p.m. and we
drove up to Toronto. For those
of you who recall my touting
the “New Gate of Cleve” forget
it. The establishment is gone,
defunct apparently. If she, the
forementioned sweet young thing,
(not my wife) poked about the
adjacent area however would have
found the male half of Ian and
Sylvia, Ian Tyson doing a single,
so even if my information was
hopelessly out of date, hopefully
the young lady and her party
had an enjoyable evening. Oh,
Ian Tyson was at a place called
the Riverboat, in case anyone
wanders up in future they might
have something of interest. Unless they are in bankruptcy of
course, for which I refuse to
accept responsibility.
If you are one of those people
who can’t help but read something if it’s printed—you amuse
yourself at the breakfast table
reading cereal boxes if you don’t
have a morning paper—you may
have noted a sort of much-ado
about-naught type argument going

on involving two gentlemen

who try to write “The Right”
and a number of other people,
myself included.
Being a sort of nasty soul I
would rather beat stupidity to
death with its’ own weapons so
I have stayed well away from
the moral implications of the
original
subject, “Abortions,”
and have answered Mr. Callan’s
plea to show him how he has
gone astray. Well, I did show

19ft

by STEESE

him but he didn’t see it so with
heavy heart I return to the discourse.
Mr. Callan originally said in
the Spectrum of April 8 that
(this is probably going to result
in a yelp of foul by JC himself
but I believe it is legitimate) “If
A is ever M, it is always M.
Since manifest evidence shows A
is not always M, A is not ever M.”
On Tuesday last Mr. Callan produces this formula. “Given: If
A, then B. Therefore: If not B,
then A. Given: not B. Therefore:
not A.”
Bear with me gentle reader
for I fail to see the connection
between these two sets of statements. Let us try placing the
first set into the form the author
of the first set says both sets

are. Hmmmmmm.

“Given; If Abortion if ever
moral, it is always Moral. Therefore: If not always Moral, it is
not always Abortion’’ (Waaaattt?)
I suppose I just am as stupid
as Mr. C says I am. But I am
willing to learn so I would consider it a very great favor if
Mr. Callan will put the original
statements concerning Abortion
into the form he claims they are
in only clear enough so that
stupid asses like me who have
to invent their own logic to survive will more truly be able to
appreciate his great wisdom.
We will ignore the fact that he
is going to have a hell of a time
doing it because he has lead to
turn into gold. But considering
his political and humanitarian
outlook he just may be an alchemist too.

YAF Soundboard

about

three

arguments

against it.

The

...

«;

The first is that it is a violation of “academic freedom.” This
argument is usually all that’s
necessary, since just the mention
of that sacred phrase on this
campus as generally enough to
foreclose any rational discussion
of an issue. But what does this
nebulous, often-misued shiboleth
mean? Does it refer to the right
of any student, professor or organization to express their view,
regardless of its popularity?

If so, then a walk through Norton any weekday (or Dr. Furnas’
office recently) should be sufficient to convince an unbiased observer that SDS’s academic freedom has not been violated, nor
should it be.
But does academic freedom im-

ply the right of SDS to control

the student newspaper, which is
subsidized by the students money?
This paper, as presently constructed, prints biased and slanted articles which present a one-sided
view of campus and international
activities, advocates non-support
of our athletic teams, attacks our
fraternities (going so far as to
ridicule
service fraternity for
raising money for crippled children), “labels” a professor who
opposes Communism “stupid” and
“ignorant” in print, castigates the
president-elect of the university
before he even arrives, for his
•

anarchy,

“filthy spech” movements, etc., at Berkley, suggest-

ing that UB ought to become another Berkley, and best of aH it

does these things in the name of
the majority of the students and
with their money!
Now it is self-evident that many
viewpoints should be and are
expressed. Yet excluding complete objectivity (which the Spectrum obviously does not possess)
the student newspaper’s policies
will reflect only one of these.

If it would be a violation of
“academic freedom’’ were that
view not to be SD6’s, is it not a
similar violation of academic freedom that H is not the view of
some other organization? Considering that much of the outside
community judges us by what appears in our student newspaper,
wouldn’t it be fairer to let the
majority of the students have a
say as to the viewpoint content
and emphasis of our newspaper?
On to argument No. 2—which
can be found in Discussion's interview with Mr. Taylor. Namely
that if we elect the Chief Editor,
we shall no longer possess a
“good newspaper.” Or, in other
words, the students, if given the
chance to elect someone will undoubtedly elect a popular but
totally incompenent individual.
Right, Clint Deveaux? Right,
Joel Feinman? While we’re at
it, maybe we ought to abolish the
Student Senate and IRC, since
the administrators must have

“competence” in their field while
an elected student may not be
qualified. ('It really shouldn’t be
necessary to add that I am being
sarcastic and not actually advocating this, but I fear that if I
don’t, the same readers who
thought that James Callan wanted
mothers to take knives and kill
their children may again write in
and complain.)
So we come to the third argument—Do the citizens of New
York elect the Chief Editor of
the Times or do the “townies”
elect the editor for the News?
But ther exists one vital difference. If enough people disapprove of the Times or the News
and cease to purchase it, the
journal will be compelled either
to improve or go bankrupt. But
here the Spectrum is a monopoly
subsidized by your money (unlike some colleges where the
school newspaper is sold and
thus self-supporting).

Whether you like it or not, or
even read it, is of no consequence.

You’ve already bought the Spectrum! And it speaks for you to
the outside world. Shouldn’t it
then be responsible to you the
students? And wouldn’t it be consistent with our progressive and
democratic tradition which has
elected student leaders for other
endeavors?

Bisonhead Taps '67 Class
On Tuesday, May 3, twelve male
juniors were tapped for the Bisonhead Society class of 1967. President Arthur Seigel presided over
the tapping ceremony. Honored
guests included Dean R. Siggelkow and Dean R. Gratwick.

Bisonhead, one of the oldest
traditions on this campus, is the
senior men's honor society. Selection is based on demonstration
of outstanding qualities of character, leadership, and scholarship.
Former members include Professor John Horton of the History

Department and Dr. Philip Weis
of the Medical School.

The men selected were: Daniel
Sella, J. Edward Smith, Thomas
Rogers, Laurence Glazer, Leon
Kellner, Leslie Lupert, Michael
Henry, Peter Hinunel, George
Roger, Robert Montgomery, Joel
Kershner and David Schriber.
This year’s Bisonhead activities
included open lectures featuring
two visiting Nobel Prize winners
and discussions with members of
the faculty and administration.

�Friday, May 6, &lt;1966

oCetter to the Editor
Open Dormitories Suggested
TO THE EDITOR;

Now that the ever so thoughtful and liberal-minded members
of the administration have decided that resident students are mature enough to dress themselves,
how about them recognizing the
fact that they are mature enough
to know when to undress themselves? That is, isn’t it about
time the dorms were open to
members of the opposite sex?
Since other schools allow this, is
it that the chosen ones who go
there are more capable of mature
thought (or just more capable of
mature thought when applying to
colleges?) Could it be because

PAM PIVC

SPECTRUM

iho is your ideal date? Thousands use Central Control and its high-speed
computer for a live, flesh-and-blood answer to this question.
Your ideal date such a person exists, of course.
But how to cet acquainted? Our Central Control computer
processes 10,000 names an hour. How lone would it take
you to meet and form an opinion of that many people?
You will be matched with five ideally suited persons
of the opposite sex, right in your own locale (or in any
area of the U.S. you specify). Simply, send $3.00 to Central
Control lor your questionnaire. Each of the five will bo
os perfectly matched with you in interests, outlook and
background as computer science makes possible.
Central Control is nationwide, but its programs are
completely localized. Hundreds of thousands of vigorous
and alert subscribers, all sharing the desire to meet their
ideal dates, have found computer dating to be exciting and
-

this is a state school, that we are
denied the freedom allowed to so
many others?
This is the freedom that will
reflect not only the maturity of
the resident students, but also the
maturity of the resident students
but also the maturity of the administration since it should not
be an every other Sunday following an odd month beginning on
Monday affair. Also this freedom
of thoughtful action should not
be so limited in scope as to exclude liquor and gambling as outlets for the “mature” college stu-

highly acceptable.

All five of your ideal dates will be delightful. So

hurry and send your $3.00 (or your questionnaire.

dent.

CENTRAL CONTROL, Inc.

—-Michael Lichtman

22 Park Avenue

Campaign Vandalism Criticized
TO THE EDITOR:
On behalf of the undersigned,
we would like to call to your
attention the disgraceful defacing of the constructions, posters,
etc. of the recent Spring Weekend campaigns. Many Greek women devoted many hours of hard
work into the planning and making of this publicity. Our en-

thusiasm for Spring Weekend has

not been discouraged, but we are

disappointed that our efforts are
not appreciated more. We hope
that in future years we can rely
on more support from the campus police and the student body

to prevent such incidents.

Alpha Gamma Delta
Chi Omega
Sigma Kappa Phi

Spectrum Sports Congratulated
TO THE EDITOR;

I would like to congratulate the
Spectrum and Coach Doc Urich
for the column ‘The Coach’s Corner." I believe that these articles
will generate a new spirit and

been lacking. Once again, congratulations and here's hoping
that next year each home football
game will be sold out.
Marv Robbins
Sports Editor,
“Buffalonian”

enthusiasm that has heretofore

Academic Integrity Urged
Dear President Furnas;

American colleges and universities increasingly compromise
the integrity of independent
scholarship and ethical commitment as greater demands from
outside interests encroach upon
the educational responsibilities
we as faculty members must fulfill. Faculty members no longer
even have available to them faculty commitment to off-campus
endeavors as university presidents become signatories to secret agreements implicating the
scholarly and ethical responsibilities which are not the prerogatives of university presidents to
offer. We have in mind the recent exposure of the C.LA.’s involvement in research activities
at Michigan State University as
described in the April issue of
Ramparts; the founding of the
C.I.A.’s Center for International
Studies at MIT; sponsoring of
“undercover" research activities
via private foundations, the Agency for International Development,
and Department of Defense.
We now call upon you to begin
to disassociate this University
from any commitment compromising the educational and ethical
standards of our University. We
feel that any cooperation with the

government beyond explicit educational and ethical requirements
of the University—such as with
the Defense Department, Central
Intelligence Agency, Selective
Service System, etc.—is most improper.
Specifically, we call upon you
to accede immediately to the students’ request to attend a public
meeting to discuss the relations
of the University with the Selective Service System. We further
urge you to cancel completely
the forthcoming Selective Service

examination since it is not the
responsibility of this University
to partake of any examinations
for a governmental agency not
in keeping with the educational
standards of scholarly performance by students.
More generally, we feel that
this University must now establish an explicit policy in regard
to its relations with governmental
agencies so as to avoid repetition
of protests to specific instances.

Respectfully yours,
Sidney M. Willhelm
Associate Professor
Bill J. Harrell
Lecturer

El win H. Powell
Associate Professor

Religion On Campus
GAMMA DELTA
Gamma Delta will hold its final
get-together Sunday. May 1, at St.

Paul’s Lutheran Church, Main St.,
Eggertsville, from 3:30 to 8 p.m.
The program includes sports, a
pizza supper and worship. For
rides, meet at the east entrance
of Norton at 3:30 p.m.

HILLEL
Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45.
Arthur Frank will speak on; “Reflections On My Faith and My

People." The annual closing dinner will be held on Sunday, May

Awards
1, in the Hillel House.
will be presented to students lor
outstanding service. A review of
the year’s activities will be given
by President Jacquelyn Finley.
The 1966-67 officers will be in-

stalled.

INTER-VARSITY
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
to the
Those who wish to go
Fellowship dinner tonight, should
met in Tower Parking Lot at
5:30 p.m.

-ARROW*

Cum Laude
button-down oxford...
shirt at your
earliest opportunity. You’re sure to find
the right stripes and colors you prefer in
our wide selection... for they were chosen
the college men on our campus.
*5
Stop in and see this handsome

KLEIN HA
Downtown Buffalo

Throway Plata

•

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

�SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

1

Friday, May

6. 1966

Directory of Philosophy Published;
Guide to World-Wide Philosophy
UB Philosophy professor Paul
Kurtz and Mr. Gilbert Varet of
the French Center of Philosophical Documentation, are co-editors
of the recently published International Directory of Philosophy
and Philosophers.

Dr. Kurtz explained, “The Directory is designed to serve as a
guide to philosophy on a worldwide basis . . . and to contribute
to international dialogue and communication."
Containing information on philosophy in more than 80 countries, the directory is the first
of its kind in the field and the
first to contain a section concerning the Soviet Union written by
Soviet philosophers.
Dr. Kurtz commented, “In the
directory, participation from all
over the world including the
Communist countries is important
because it gives the world philosophers information on the countries which was previously only
sketchy.”
The directory,
English, French,

published in
Spanish and

German, supplies brief descriptions of the state of philosophy in
twenty-six countries. Universities
where philosophy is taught, philosophical institutions, associations,
societies and journals are listed.
Dr. Rollo Handy, professor and
Philosophy Department chairman,
is one of the forty-seven philos-

ophers contributing to the Directory. Contributions also came
from fourteen national philosophical associations throughout the

world.
The Directory was published
under the auspices of the International Institute of Philosophy
and was sponsored by UNESCO.

Influence of Roman Oligarchy
Discussed by Earl at Lecture
The “potent influence” of the
Roman aristocratic oligarchy was
discussed by Dr. Donald C. Earl,
visiting professor of classics at
Northwestern University, in his
lecture on “The Roman Aristocratic Ideal” last Monday.
Dr. Earl said that the aristocratic minority established the
civilization, adding that courage,
wisdom, public service, ancestral

fame, dignity and honor were
the components of this ideal.
Most important of the aristocrat’s aspirations, according to
Dr. Earl, was glory through public service. “Service to the state
and a high sense of morality
were expected of every young
man in the aristocracy.
“The chief business of republican Home was its politics," Dr.
Earl noted. “Action rather than
oratory was essential.”

Lockwood displays A. Conger Goodyear Exhibit

Photo by Alan Gruber

Gifts Given by Gen. Goodyear
To UB Displayed at Library
Gifts of the late A. Conger
Goodyear to the University over
a period of years which include
many important literary manuscripts and first editions is on
display in Lockwood Library. In
1948, he gave the Lockwood Library the most complete collection known of the manuscripts of
the 19th century British essayist,
William Hazlitt. Several years
later, Mr. Goodyear made it possibel for the library to acquire
a unique collection of memora-

bilia

Other travelers checks
are every bit as good as
First National City Banks

...until you lose them!

about

Katherine

Cornell,

distinguished actress who was
born in Buffalo. Other donations
by Mr. Goodyear on view in the
library include manuscripts of
Charles Lamb, William Makepeace
Thackeray, and George Bernard
Shaw.

Marlin Places First
Senior Chemical Engineering
student Thomas Marlin won first
place for a presentation on
“Hydro-Dynamic Analogs of
Chemical Recation Sytsems” in a
state-wide competition among undergraduate Chemical Engineering students at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute April 29.
Mr. Gerald Zakalik received
honorable mention for his presentation of “Retention of Liquids by Granular Solids.”
The Lockwood display, planned
to complement the current exhibition at the Albright-Knox Gal-

“One-year marriage? Seems to
be the only way for a Cliffie
(Radcliffe student) to get out of
the dorm. I’ll share expenses, am
a good cook. Other details? We
can work it out. Contact the
Crimson, Box 2000.”
The ad was placed by an at‘.ractive 20-year-old junior who
is tired of living in a dormitory
She said she placed the ad after
learning she will not be one of
the 30 Radcliffe seniors granted
permission to live off campus

travelers checks, like First
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But if you think all travelers checks are alike,
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restaurants, air terminals, etc., the world over.
Next time you travel, insist on First National
City travelers checks.
They cost just one cent per dollar.

First National City BankTravelers Checks
Sold by banks everywhere

Goodyear Exhibit
At Albright-Knox
The late Gen. A. Conger Goodis being honored at the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery by a
show of over 200 works he collected during his lifetime.
General Goodyear was a board
member and chairman of the art
committee at the then Albright
Art Gallery in the 1920s. Leaving
Buffalo, he became one of the
founders and the first president
of the Museum of Modern Art,
New York. During his life he
played an important role in the
development of both institutions.
Shortly before his death he established the A. Conger Goodyear
Fund at the Albright-Knox, made
up of 271 works by such artists
at Gauguin, van Gogh, Seurat,
Toulouse-Lautrec, Daumier, Degas, Leger, Pissarro and many
others.
During his life, General Goodyear gave a total of 361 works
to the Atbright-Knox. The current
exhibition, continuing through
June 6, includes works in the
Goodyear Fund and some from
the Museum of Modern Art and
private collections.
year

Cliffie Places Marriage Ad
A Radcliffe co-ed placed a classified advertisement in the Harvard Crimson Monday which read:

Other leading

lery of the paintings collected by
Mr. Goodyear, will continue
through June 10.

next year.
“X really intended the thing as
a protest against Radcliffe's poli-

cies, but I’m serious,” she commented.
The co-ed, who asked to remain
anonymous, disclosed that she
has received more than a dozen

replies.
One applicant for the position
sent in bis name and address
with a simple, “Well?”
Another replied, “I was about
to advertise for a female roommate, but I'm not sure of a oneyear marriage, though. I need
a cook, but you’ll have to cook a
test dinner, etc., of course.”
The co-ed insists she is completely serious about the ad. "I

just want to find “someone I
can get along with for a year.”

She added, “the more likely it
becomes, the more scared I get.”

China Lecture

Lecturer and writer Maud Russell will discuss “Peoples’ China
Today" Tuesday, May 17, in the
Conference Theater at s’ p.m. A
Chinese documentary film entitled “The Glorious Festival” will
be shown following the lecture.
Miss Russell was a social worker and a resident of China for
26 years, and was a member of
the Young Women’s Christian Association of China.
She is the publisher of the
magazine “Far East Reporter” in
which she is described as “a citizen determined to make use of
her insights and convictions to
build among her fellow citizens
an appreciation of the relationship between their well-being
and our country's Far Eastern
policy.”

“The Glorious Festival”, narrated in English, commemorates
the 14th anniversary of the Chinese revolution.

Miss Russell’s lecture is sponsored by the Philosophical Society. Donation is $.50.

�Friday, May C, 1M6

SPECTRUM

PAG! SEVIN

Idea of a 'Compact for Education'
Quickly Becomes a Legal Reality
With relatively little fanfare
the Compact for Education has
grown from a rough idea in the
minds of a few men to a legal
reality. It has ail taken just a
little more than a year.
The legal body now in existence
is the Education Commission of
the States, a permanent organization agreed upon by political and
education leaders from every
state when they met in Kansas
City last September and formed
the Compact for Education, a
temporary planning organization.
Dr. James B. Conant first discussed the ideas on which the
compact was to be based in his
book, “Shaping Educational Policy.” Conant criticized the generally low level of state-supported
education, while noting that the
U.S. Constitution does not authorize Congress to set any sort of
“national education policy.”
The commission, if joined by
all of the states, will be a representative body of 370, with
seven delegates from each state
and 20 from the federal government and foundations. The commission will authorize studies in
various areas of education to “present alternatives to policy decisions.” In other words, the commission will be a giant information clearing house.
The commission will also make
recommendations on educational
policy to the various state legislatures and possibly even to the
federal government, but the commission itself will have no policymaking power
The idea was seized upon by
former North Carolina Gov. Terry
Sanford, who was at Duke University writing a book on the
function of the states. Sanford
developed the draft proposal for
the compact and convened a
group of educators and political
leaders to plan for the Kansas
City meeting.

Ronald Moskowitz, the commission’s asociate director, said that
22 states have joined the commision to date; 30 states are expected to be members by the
group’s first annual meeting in
Chicago in June.
Maine is the only state to have
rejected the commission so far,
and the rejection prompted a
hurried trip by Moskowitz to visit Maine legisaltors. Moskowitz
said he feels certain the next
session of the Maine legislature
will authorize membership in the
commission and attributed the rejection to “politics and misun-

"“The chief critics of the commission have been in the ranks
of higher education. One of the
most vocal is Herbert E. Longe
necker who wrote in the Winter
1966 issue of The Educational
Record that “no logical argument
has been advanced that desired
improvements in education would
result from deliberately bringing
politics into education.”
Critics argue that the representative body
with seven delegates from each state
is not
large enough to cover all of the
facets of education and that the
commission necessarily will exclude some ideas.
This argument has been particularly prevalent among higher education critics of the commission.
Allan W. Ostar, the executive director of the Association of State
Colleges and Universities, told a
meeting of the Education Writers
Association in February that it
would be very difficult to “represent” education with only seven
delegates from a state, all of
whom are to be named by the
governor. Ostar said there was a
general feeling among those in
higher education that the commission is “a new bureaucracy
in the field of education without
a clearly established need.”
President Elvis Stahr, Jr., of Indiana University, made a presentation at the Kansas City meeting
on behalf of the National Association of State Universities and
Land Grant Colleges in which he
suggested that higher education
either be left out of the scope
—

—

The Official Bulletin is an
authorized publication of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo, for which the Spectrum
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to 1)4
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not

accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
Harriman Library—during final

The commission describes itself as a “partnership between
the educational leadership and
the political leadership for the advancement of education,” and
this has brought caustic remarks
from some sources who suggest
politics should be kept out of
the schools, not brought in.

Computing Center

May 10
Seminar in Biochemical Pharmacology—features Dr. Ross Hall,

Names Appointees

Computing Center director Anthony Ralston announced the ap
pointment of Mr. James A. Brooking as assistant manager for systems programming and Mr. Bruce
V. Vereecken as systems analyst
at the Center.

Mr. Brooking has been systems supervisor of the Syracuse
University Computing Center
since 1962. He earned his master’s degree in Mathematics at
Syracuse in 1963 and graduated
magna cum laude with a bachelor
of science degree from the State
University at Albany in 1961.

Vereecken, who received a
degree from
UB in 1965, has served as student consultant of the Computing
Center since 1965.
Mr,

bachelor of science

included for it.
Moskowitz counters by arguing
that educational leaders have always bad to work with politicians
in order to operate. “Any educator who has ever prepared a budget or gone to the state legislature for aid knows that education and politics meet on many
levels," he said. “What we want
to do is help them meet with better

understanding

and

agree-

ment," he said.
Moskowitz said all of the critics have missed the point in fearing the commission will interfere
with higher education or education at any other level. He interprets the role of the commission
as primarily information gathering and said the studies the group
will undertake will probably be
its most useful contribution.
He does not minimize, however,
the weight a recommendation
from the commission's 370 representatives would have on state
legislators. This is how the commission-hopes to achieve the general upgrading of education nationally that was called for by
Dr. Conant, Moskowitz said.
As he prepared for the commission's steering committee
meeting in Sante Fe, Moskowitz
could say that the critics have
virtually stopped calling for an
end to the commission. “We're a
legal entity now,” he said, “and
they know we are here to stay.
So they’re willing to work with
us.”

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

examinations the Reserve Room
will be open until 1 a m., including Saturday and Sunday. These
extended hours will begin on
the last day of classes, May 10,
and continue through Friday,
May 20.
Financial Aid Applications for
the 1966 Summer Session—applications are available at the Office of Financial Aid, 233 Hayes
Hall. A minimum of six semester
hours is necessary to be eligible
for the National Defense Student
Loan. The deadline date for filing
applications is May 20, 1966.
WEEKLY CALENDAR

derstanding.”

of the commission entirely or that
a separate representative body be

Roswell Park Memorial Institute.
The topic is “Chemistry and Biological Activity of Some of the
Minor Nucleosides of sRNA,” 244
Health Sciences, 4 p.m.
PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The “Job Corps” needs college
graduates with bachelor and
master degrees in basic or remedial education, recreation, industrial arts of vocational education, psychology, physical educa
tion and counseling or sociology.
The Office of Economic Opportunity is interested in interviewing college seniors who may be
interested in working at one of
the eighty-eight Conservation Centers in the United States. Contact the Education Division immediately if you are interested
so that interviews can be arrang
ed.
Graduate students —AID, The

Agency for International Development will have 40 civilian openings in Laos and Vietnam this
summer. Candidates would work
in the areas of rural reconstruction, refugee and community development. Candidates must be
full time graduate students and
21 years of age.

Career Opportunities for May
Graduates—the following companies have career positions
available:
Schermerhom and Co.
Hooker Chemical
Cornell Aeronautical Lab.
Endicott Johnson Corp.
Federal Power Commission
Xerox Corp.
Ford Motor Co.
Marlin Rockwell Co.
American Optical Co.
Young Women’s Christian
Association
Wiley and Sons
Boy Scouts of America
Sherwin-Williams Co.
Sperry Phoenix Co.

Schechner Lectures
On Modern Theatre
Richard Schechner, Editor of
the Tulane Drama Rcvua. will
speak on "Modern Theatre and Its
New Directions" at the Studio

Arena Theatre, 681 Main Street,
on Friday, May 6, 1966
The lecture is open to the public

at 5 p.m.

free of charge.
Mr. Schechner is an associate
professor of theatre at Tulane
University and former

chairman
of the board of the Free Southern
Theatre. Under his editorial leadership the Tulanc Drama Revue
has become one of the outstanding theatrical journals in the
world. Recent issues have explored the new experimental theatre
in Poland and Italy, the aleotoric
or chance theatre pieces of John
Cage, Michael Kirby and other
contemporary artists.

The
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*»emem«e««emem«a»ee«em»—«awi

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�IFlffiWfe MSLrman
It’s a pleasant surprise to report that it’s a good
weekend for movies in Buffalo. Pasolini’s poetically
beautiful Gospel According to St. Matthew (which I
reviewed two weeks ago) continues its run for those of
you who haven’t seen it. Harper, thoroughly enjoyable
despite hack direction, and featuring a tersely crisp
screenplay by William Goldman, begins its second week
in downtown Buffalo. The long-awaited A Thousand
Clowns has finally opened and will be reviewed next
week. Here at UB, the film committee is presenting
Beat the Devil, the high camp collaboration between
Truman Capote and John Huston. It stars Bogart in a
most un-Bogart-type role (Bogart himself hated the film,
which, given the theme, is the very reason it was a
success), and an outstanding supporting cast. (The film
committee, by the way, should be congratulated on its
decision to present films all summer long.) One of
Alfred Hitchcock’s best films, North by Northwest, is
back for a re-run. as is The Chase —worth seeing to watch
Brando carry-on.
King and Country has opened at the Glen Art Theatre. Although the film is highly overrated, it is worth
seeing not only because of the power of its theme, but
because of fine acting by the entire cast—Dirk Bogarde,
Tom Courtney, and John Mills in particular. Like all
of Joseph Losey’s previous films, King and Country is
unbearably heavy-handed, but like the best of the naturalistic novels which have over-influenced Losey, the force
of the sincerity just manages to win out in the end.
But the best news of all for movie-heads is the
The film
was made in 1959, but it was not released in the U.S.
until last year. It was directed by Sidney J. Furie, and
it was only because of the success at the box office of
Furie’s The Ipcress File, that The Leather Boys was imported to this country at all.
Thematically, it is similar to The Wild One and to
Scorpio Rising, but unlike the former, The Leather Boys
is artistically honest, and unlike the latter, it doesn’t
smother itself in self-conscious and sometimes fatuous
hipness. Furie tells his story simply and beautifully,
allowing it to unfold leisurely, without any trace of
pretention. As a result, it is artistic and not arty.
opening of The Leather Boys at the Circle-Art.

It was one of the first of the British nouvelle vague
films (made about the same time as Breathle**), and
already seems clothed in the same air of painful nostalgia which permeates, say, the films of Renoir or Vigo.
And it’s a painful film to watch for reasons other than
its theme or artistic merit.

Friday, May 6, I9M

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

Conference Theatre's Weekend Presentation:
'Beat the DeviT Starring Humphrey Bogart
Tough, cynical, romantic, Humphrey Bogart’s reputation as an
actor has grown through the
years. There is no Bogart “legend” or “cult.” There simply is
an increasing interest in his pictures, both on television and in
the

theatre.

A case in point is John Houston’s production of Beat the Devil now at the Conference Theatre from Thursday thru Sunday
with Gina Lollobrigida, Jennifer
Jones, Robert Morley and Peter
Lorre also starred. Originally released ten years ago, Beat the
Devil won considerable critical
acclaim and a comparatively cool
audience reception.
years
Now considered ten
ahead of its time, Beat the Devil
is establishing boxoffice records.
An adventure-comedy in which
Bogart fights off a pack of assorted rascals, as well as a pair
of roving-eyed females (one of
whom is his wife!), Beat the Devil is in the suspense tradition
of Bogart’s Maltese Falcon and
Big Sleep, with special emphasis on comedy. Here, perhaps, is
the reason for the new success
of Beat the Devil. Bogart had
long ago demonstrated a rare
facility for comedy, but it showed
up only briefly in most of his
films. Sabrina, in which he starred with William Holden and
Audrey Hepburn, and The Cane
Mutiny in which his Captain
Queeg started out as a figure of
fun and slowly merged into a
haunted, pathetic officer, were
sharp departures from the “tough
guy” image Bogart created for
hemself and for his audiences.
Beat the Devil is Bogart at his
comedy best.
Beat the Devil was written by
John Houston and Truman Capote from the novel by James
Helvick. Huston directed the Santana-RomuIus production, a Royal Films International release.

Humphrey Bogart and Gina Lollobrigida being friendly In BEAT

THE DEVIL.

Annual Subscription Drive
At Studio Arena Theatre
The 2nd Year Subscriber Drive
for Buffalo’s year-old Studio
Arena Theatre will kickoff on
May 11 with the Buffalo premiere
of the Broadway hit musical by
Anthony Newley and Leslie Bricusse, The Roar of the Greasepaint—The Smell of the Crowd.

Saturday twilight (5 p.m.) shows.
A free copy of the Studio

Arena’s brochure will be mailed
to anyone giving his name to the
Studio ARENA Box Office, either
by phone, to 856-5650, or by post
card, addressed to the theatre at
681 'Main Street, Buffalo, New
York 14203.

Subscribers are offered perman-

ent seats for the eight-play series
beginning in the Fall of the year,

“Our second year as the only
year-round professional theatre
for the Niagara Frontier is a very
important year,” Mr. Rand said.
“We should assert together the
vitality of theatre as entertainment and as a cultural value for
the whole community.”

at the end of the Theatre’s first
summer of full production. In
addition, 20 per cent discounts
are offered on all subscriptions
for Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday,
and Thursday nights and for the

“HELLO HARPER' FAREWELL 007!”

Band Concert

-

—

Ntw Yorft Dolly Nows

On Lawn, Sunday
The Department of Music has
announced plans for the annual
“Band Lawn Concert,” to be held

on Sunday, May 8th, at 3 p.m. on

the campus of the university.
Under the direction of 'Frank J.
Cipolla and Richard W. Rodean,
the combined University Bands of
130 students will present a “pops”
concert featuring traditional and
contemporary muisc suitable for
an open air band concert. Selections will include such works as

Ths Gospel According to SI. Matthew

The British film establishment had tried to get Furie

to change the ending of the film, and when he refused,

the release date was held up for a year. Thus, when
Taste of Honey was released, it was billed as Rita Tushingham's first film, and Tony Richardson got the credit
for “discovering” her. Actually The Leather Boys was
Miss Tushingham’s first film, and it was Furie who should
get the credit being the first one to recognize her fine
talent. Dudley Sutton, who turns in the best performance in the film, is now a sometime junkie—reduced to
taking bit parts in Boulting Brothers comedies. And
Colin Campbell has disappeared entirely. The cafe off
the North Circular Road near London 'where much of
the film was shot was gutted by fire, and an office
building now stands in its place. Now none of these
things really means anything in terms of the film itself,
but if one does know about them, you get the same
strange feeling watching The Leather Boys as you do
seeing a film by Ron Rice and realizing that most of the
people responsible for the film have disappeared or died,
while one or two have gone on to other things.
Of all the scenes in the film which stay in my mind,
the final “tracking shot” of about thirty seconds is perhaps the most memorable. Poignant and even sentimental, yet harsh and essentially tough-minded, it serves as
microcosm for the tone of the film as a whole. It’s a
great movie. It’s here seven years after it should be,
but at least it’s here. Don’t miss it.

von Suppe’s Light Cavalry Overture, Johann Strauss’ Emperor
Valte, Percy Grainger’s Irish Tune
From County Derry, Arthur Sullivan’s Pineapple Poll and standard
marches, show tunes and popular
band highlights.
The annual “Lawn Concert”
has established itself as one of

m
GASSER!

the fine traditions associated with
the University Band activities on
this campus. Bringing to life the
nostalgic heritage of “Park Band”
music to those who can still recall
the days of afternoon band concents, the University Bands present this program for all students
and residents in the Buffalo area
on the lawn of the Main Street
Campus
FREE OF CHARGE.

1966 Folk Festival
Applications are being
accepted for committee
work on the 1966 Folk
Festival. W o r k-minded
people who will be in
Buffalo this summer are
desired. Ushers are also
needed for the evenings
of October 7 and 8, 1966.
Leave name, address, telephone number and qualifications in Jay Cook’s
box in the Spectrum office.

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PACK MINI

'Academic Goldbricking' Sweeps Campuses;
Becomes College Pastime According to Polls
By LEW ALPERN
Tha Collegiate Press Service
A recent survey taken to ascertain “What’s In Among College
Students" has divulged a surprising fact: the most popular
new activity among the hope of
the future is not sex, nor narcotics, nor cramming themselves
into phone booths. Today’s college students are now channeling all their free time and effort
into academic goldbricking.
Academic goldbricking has existed for a long time. But never
before has the academic community recognized it as the art
it truly is. According to the poll,
on hundreds of campuses around
the country, there is actually hot
competition to see who can away
with doing the least by using the
most credible excuses. Although
there is usually no tangible reward given to the successful
“non-atudent,” champion goldbricks usually enjoy a degree of
respect unequaled by even cum
laud* graduates.
How the new trend started is
not quite known. One theory
credits it to compulsory orienta-

tion programs for freshmen. Ac-

cording to this theory, anxious

young freshmen eager to purchase college sweatshirts and explore fraternity and sorority
houses, boycott orientation programs and discover how easy it
is to talk their way out of it.
They take their new-found experience and adapt it to skipping
classes, missing tests and fabricating papers.
Another thory holds that goldbricking comes from compulsory
ROTC programs. “Here at Penn
State everybody has to take Army or Air Force ROTC. Since
everyone must do it and nobody
is particularly interested in it,
you try to get away with as much
as possible. Eventually this attitude spreads to all other phases
of your college life. Besides,
where could you get better practice in goldbricking than in a
military situation?”
But no matter how academic
goldbricking got started, indications are that it’s here to stay
for quite a few semesters. In the
past, conscientious students were
respected for their desire for

recently good
students have been coming under
censure by their cohorts.
“The way I always looked at
it,” says one Beaver College coed,
“it really doesn’t pay to learn.
Nobody in this school cares about
anything but your grades, so if
they don’t care what I learn, why
should I? Besides, the faculty
here is so gullible that it really
is a challenge to see how much
you can lie, and still make them
believe you.”

knowledge.

But

Big lies are favored among
collegiate
goldbricks. Popular
opinion holds that the bigger the

lie, the greater the likelihood the
professors will believe it. Most
college faculties have heard the
small lies so often, that professors won’t believe an illness excuse even when it is accompanied by a note from a doctor.
A coed from NYU tells an interesting story about how she
learned the cruel facts of life
about missing tests. “I came down
with a 24-hour virus the day of
my midterm. I had to miss the
test and when I tried to explain
it to my .teacher, he mumbled
something about being born yesterday, and told me I was getting
a zero. Thinking fast, I burst
into tears and told him that I
had really visited a gynecologist
and was two months pregnant.

Not only did he forget about the
zero, but he waived the exam altogether. It just goes to show.
H dosn’t really pay to be honest
in a corrupt world.”
How do today's college students feel about their new game?
Surprisingly, there are few indications of even slight guilt. “Why
shouldn’t I try to get away with
What I can? In this world, it’s
not what you know, it’s how you
use it. I’m doing myself less good
by religiously trying to learn
more, than I am by channeling
what 1 already do know into trying to do less. Besides, if the
school really cared, they would
have stopped me long ago."
“Of course there is,” says one
June graduate. “Now that I've
learned to goldbrick in college,
I’m going to go right out into
the world and avoid the draft."

Music Department Hosts
Modern Jazz Program
The New York State Council
on the Arts is preparing a unique
program which will be made available only to a few music schools
in upstate New York. It is spe-

cifically prepared to provide
music students and faculty and
other interested persons to have
a first hand hearing of what may
be a very important development
in the new improvisational music
world. There is very little one can
tell so far about this new trend.
Some of the exponents are Sun
Ra, John Coltrane, Archie Shepp,
Cecil Taylor, Ornette Coleman,
Byron Allen, Albert Ayler and
Giuseppe Logan. The UB Music
Department is happy to announce
that it will be host to the group
performing the modern jazz program on May 10, 1966, at 8:30
p.m., Baird Recital Hall. The pub-

lie is welcome, and there will be
no admission charge.

Vocal Ensembles
Perform Tuesday

The UB Music Department will
present a recital of solo vocal
ensembles on Tuesday afternoon,
May 10th, at 4:30 p.m. in the
Baird Recital Hall. The performance will include voice students
of Laurence Bogue, Dorothy Rosenberger, and Muriel Herbert
Wolf. Composers to be included
on the program are: Pursell, Dowland, Arcadelt, Clemens non Papa,
Neuwbach, Buxtehude, Bach, Pergolise, Mozart, and Mendelssohn.
The public is welcome, and there
will be no admission charge.

Weekly Calendar
Varsity Tennis: UB vs. Alfred
College, 3 p.m.

Information Poll: Free University Committee, 9-4 p.m.. Lobby.
Concert: Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra, 1 p.m., Baird Hall.
Lecture: Dr. R. Stemheimer,
'Department of Physics, 4 p.m.,
Hockstetter Hall.
Coffee Hour: Graduate Student
Organization, 2 p.m., Norton.
Meeting; American Association
of University Professors, 3:30
p.m., Old Faculty Club.
Lecture: Dr. Urich Clever, 2
p.m., Health Science Building.

M flM IHfl WAS IE* m MM tf US M IS IB IMS M..

Theatre.
SUNDAY
Folk Dancing: Student Zionist
Organization, 7-10 p.m., Norton
3

Band.

UB

p.m.,

Baird Hall Lawn.
"The Magic Flute,”
8:30 p.m., Studio Theatre
School, 305 Lafayette Avenue.
Opera;

TUESDAY:
Meeting: Insurance Institute of
America, 7 p.m., Norton 332.
Concert: "The New Jazz,” Department of Music, 8:30 p.m.,
Baird Hall.

OPPORTUNITIES
Golf Lessons

—

Randy

Fox. pro

—individual, group rates, Niagara Sports Center, range and
Athol Springs
miniature golf
Circle, Rt. 75, Hamburg. Phone
825-9812.
—

iim H

Fill

theater

APARTMENTS

'54 Plymouth Bolvadera 2-Door
Hardtop, 6 cyl., standard shift,
low mileage, easy on gas. Call
Rich, NX 2-0256.

Live-In Mother 1 Helper (or summer, Private room, TV. Two
children. Good salary. 634-4298
after 4 p.m.

B.S.A. 250 cc. Street or competition prepared. Engine guaranteed. Clean. Reasonable. Call
Gene, 634-1495 after 6 p.m.

Sub-Letting an Apt. for this summer. 2V4 blocks from campus.
Room for four Rent inexpensive.

Must Soil Entire Collection of
Books, literary classics, philosophy, poetry, etc. Call 876-3174.

Completely Furnished Apt. available for summer in Sheridan
Parkside. Suitable (or three stu-

‘63 Vespa Motor Scooter, 125 cc.
excellent condition. Low mileage. Call Kurt Merkel 831-4112.
‘58 Buick $175 must be seen to be
appreciated. Phone TF 6-3865.
Ask for Ted.
Not hot! Gru2 Wristwatchas
en, Wittnauer—17 jewels, 10
K. G. plating, etc. Very reasonable. Myron, TR 6-7473.
'63 Monza Coup*, black with red
interior, 4-speed, 145 hp, heavy
duty suspension. Dunlop road
speeds—$1000. TR 3-1426
'63 VW Red. 23,000 original miles.
Excellent cond., very reasonable. Call 831-2245 days, or 876
—

4863 nights.

'64 Rambler American, excellent
condition, economy car; low
mileage; asking $1150. Contact B.
Burrows, 837-7286 weekdays.
'SB Karmin-Chia, no rust, good
mechanically. Mobil station on
Terrace and Court Sts, TL 2-8725.
$395.
Honda ISO cc.,

excellent cond.,
$350. Call NL 2-5905 after 5
p.m. weekdays—all day Saturday
and Sunday.
'SB Lambrota, 125 cc., asking $125.
Call 832-7079, Tom or Joe, after
6 p.m.
Furniture for two bedrooms, living room, kitchen (includes
rugs, TV, etc.) Must sell! Call

832 6799.
APARTMENTS

3 Bedroom Apt. For summer,
furnished. Cheap. One block
from campus on Bailey. Call
836-7763.
For summer.
Princeton Courts, furnished. 5

Varsity Track; UB Invitational.
Dance; Millard Fillmore College Association, 10 p.m.. Leisure Land.
Thaatre: “You Can’t Take It
You,” Studio Arena
With

344.
Concert:

FOR SALE

2 Bedroom Apt.

SATURDAY:

MAY 6-10
FRIDAY:

CLASSIFIED

SPECTRUM
CLASSIFIED

minute walk from campus. Call
837-4879 nights.
Room or Share an Apt. For
mer. Near campus. Call

sum-

Jim

!

831-3952.

dents. $45 each per month includes all utilities. TR 7-0112.
Summer Sublet, 2-3 roommates,
bedroom house fully furnished.
1 block from campus—11 Merrimac (off campus). Call Pete or
A1 835-3281.
7 Room Apartment, summer sub-

let, available June 1. Rent reasonable, utilities included. Call
.
886-6763 after 5 p.m.
Wanted to Rent or Sublet: Furnished apt. for graduate couple

during first session, June 6-July
15. Write: John Cannon, 2900
Wheeler St., Berkeley, California.
Faculty Member would like to
sublet reasonably priced apt.,
vicinity UB, from June 1 or earlier. Also interested in cheap car
for transportation. Call 831-3418
days, 839-1151 eves.

Female Roommate Wanted. Have
apt. Call Pal, 831 3982.
Apt. for Rent. One block from
campus. Utilities included; furnished. Call 831-3474.
PERSONAL

Fun for all ages at NIAGARA
Miniature
SPORTSCENTER
golf, game room arcade, golf driving range. 1701 Niagara Falls
—

Blvd., Tonawanda, N. Y.

Band) If you
need a good bass player, call
Ron at TX 6-1991.

Hava Bass—Need

If you saw someone hit my 1966
two-tone blue Rambler May 2
in the Main St. lot, call TF 9-2164.

Reward.

TRAVEL
UB Jet Flight to Franca leaving

June 27th, returning Sep*. 5th.
Round trip NYC-Paris, $340. Faculty, students, employees of
SUNYAB eligible. Contact Sanford Left soon! 834 1869

831-3666.
Apt. 1 Bdrm., furnished. Oxford
Ave. Available after May 20th.
Call Mr. Naeher, TR 7-1626 after
6 p.m.
Summer Sublet, 3V4 room apt.,
Princeton Courts, very well
furnished. 3 minute walk from
campus. 837-7684.
Apt. Available June 1
University Ave., 10 minute
walk. Call Barry Bienstock, after
6 p.m., 834-7144

3 Room

Summer Sublet. Two male room
mates, furnished, luxury apt.
2 blocks from campus. Call im
mediately,

837-9027.

Spanish Teaching
(English-Spanish)
Call 836-4425.

—

Apt., UB Are*, available June 1
Completely furnished, 2 bedroom duplex, new kitchen. Call

837-7258
Apt.

near

campus to sublet June 1 to
Sept. 1 $95 month including utilities. Call 833 6416 after 5 p.m. or

weekends

ADS

Female Roommate wanted for
summer, option to continue
'66-67. Just opposite campus, modApt. 837-6320 or 831-4610.

Room 355
Norton Union

6 Room Apt. June. July, August,
137 Lisbon Ave„ 3 blocks from
campus. Completely furnished.
2-3 students. $40 eaeh/moath.
Call 837-7735 after 6 pan.

Translations
Reasonable.

WANTED
Will purchase used barbell and
gym equipment. Especially 25’s
and 50 s Call Bill, 837 6639 evenings.

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
Girls interested in a summer
waitressing position in the Catskill Mt. area Contact Joanne.
837 5184 or Mary

Massachusetts Seaeoast, 3 bedroom house on ocean front, gas
heat, available weekly in June.
Phone NF +3082.

2 Bedroom Furnished

SERVICES

&amp;

Pat

831 2889.

LOST
Cre«n Wool Slicker style coat at
the TKE Beer Blast, Reward.
Call Linda TR 3-5484.

Black Wallet lost at the TKE
Beer Blast Friday, April 22.
Call Allan Levitt 895-8843

'45 Class Kins, silver polished
black onyx, initials RLM. April
Call
25, Hayes Hall. Reward.
UB

8744)525

Would the person who took a
Wallen sak Tape Recorder from
Baird Hall Thursday, April 21,
please leave it at Norton Candy
Counter.
No questions asked.
Robert little, 831-3907.
Please reGift's Beige Wallet
turn. No questions asked. Reward. Call Wendy 831-4178.

�Friday, May 6, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

GREEK NOTES

Wendy Bannister and Melody
Weiler, pledges of Alpha Gamma
Delta, were inducted into Alpha
Lambda
Delta, the National
Honor Society for freshman
women.
The Alpha Epsilon Pi

Executive

Board includes: Gustin Reichbach,
Master; Herb Glazeoff, Lieutenant
Master; Donald Zolin, Scribe:
Richard Schwartz, Exchecquer;
Jeff Mann, Sr. Member-at-Large;
Michael Lipman, Jr. Member-atLarge. Steve Smith received the
award for Mr. Inside and Barry
Cohen for Mr. Outside. Marc
Finkelstein was Most Purposeful
Pledger, The Zook Closing Affair will be held Friday, May
20, at 2492. The “Parents in
Europe Blast” will be held on
June 4 at Schwartz Hall.
Alpha Phi Omaga's semi-annual dinner dance will be held
at the Chuck Wagon Restaurant
tonight. The new officers are:
Randy Huver, President; Steve
Millman, First Vice-President;
James Jones, Second Vice-President; Mike Roach, Third VicePresident; Jerry Trent, Secretary;
and Robert Lado, Treasurer. During the Summer recess, many of
the brothers will get together
at a joint cottage in the Crystal
Beach area.
Alpha Sigma Phi placed first
for the third year in Gamma
Phi's Greek Olympiad.
Chancellor Steve Litvak of
Bata Sigma Rho was elected
Union Board Treasurer. Jeff Kane
was elected Inner Guard of BBP.
Susan Duffy of Chi Omaga was
crowned Spring Weekend Queen.
Christa Ulbrieh was tapped by
Cap and Gown and Diane Kial
was chosen outstanding student
nurse. Ann Kohler was chosen
Theta Chi’s Dream Girl and Jane
Rea was chosen Sweetheart of
Delta Chi Omega. Initiation of
the spring pledge class will be

.5irst assignment—-

day night at the Flying “E”
Ranch B.Y.O.
Theta Chi Sorority will hold a
Senior Closing Party tonight at
the Flying "E” from
to 1. The
new officers are: Debbie Brodnick, President; Claudia Elliott,
First Vice-President; Barb Tycha,
Second
Vice-President; Betty
Kearney, Corresponding Secretary; Judy Raab, Recording Secretary; Sue Swartz, Treasurer;
Suzy Beeman, Assistant Treasurer; Barb Tycha, Queens Chairman; Audie Stempel, SergeantAnita Swieczkowski,
at-Arms;
Chaplain; Pat Conners, Historian;
Judy Raab, Glad Girl; Barb Wells,
Custodian.

follow your courses with
the famous

!)

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College Outline Series
KEYED TO YOUR TEXTS
Over 100 titles on the following subjects:
ANTHROPOLOGY

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WBFO Broadcast

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MATHEMATICS

MUSIC
PHILOSOPHY
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SCIENCE
SOCIOLOGY
SPEECH

WBFO will broadcast a prerecorded panel discussion, “Three
Views on Pornography”, Wednesday, May 11, at 8:15.
Panel members are Attorney
Richard Lipsitz, Judge Joseph
Mattina, and Mr. Robert Scheuere,
President of Empire State News.
The program will also be broadcast over F.M.-radio to the Buffalo area.

“Let’s unplug the computer, boys!
Start thinking!”

Sunday.

Paul Jenkins, President of
Gamma Phi presented Chancellor Furnas with a plaque on behalf of the IFC at the Spring
Weekend Dance. The new officers are: Jim Mills, President;
A1 Kahn, Vice-President; Bob

Russell, Treasurer; Dave Potter,

Recording Secretary; Scott Moss,
Corresponding Secretary; George
Cushing, Historian; John Anderson, Sergeant-at-Arms.

©Siialls'
□□□

Phi Kappa Pai't new officers
are: Tony Capozzi, President;
Roger Fredericks, Vice-President:
Lee Schweichler, Treasurer; John
Sansone, Corresponding Secretary; Don Warren, Recording Secretary;
Bob Schmidt, Pledgemaster; Joe Rich, Messenger;

w

Frank Domino. Historian; Art
Stevanato, Sergeant-at-Arms; and
Angelo Curto, Chaplain.

Pi Lambda Tau't officers are:
Elliot Cole, President; Dennis
Licherelli, First Vice-President;
Gerald Barta, Second Vice-President; Ronald Boiler, Treasurer;
Garry Tittemore, Recording Secretary; John Kravec, Corresponding Secretary; Robert Fisher,
Alumni Secretary: Sandy Simon,
Historian; John Bolton, Chaplain:
Donald Gardner, IFC Representative.

Sigma Alpha Mo's officers are:
Chick Arnold, Prior; Bob Levitt,
Vice-Prior; Marshall Bouchey, Exchequer; Dave Seiman, Recorder.
Cindy Perl of Sigma Dalta Tau
was chosen as best senior of the
year. Judy Aroneck was chosen

the best sister. Rosie Brothman

was tapped by Cap and Gown.
The pledge class picnic this Sunday concludes activities for the
semester.

Elaine Kwitowski of Sigma KapPhi was tapped for Cap and
Gown and Suzanne Scbilld was
named the outstanding sopho-

pa

more woman.
Tau Kappa Epsilon will hold
a Jungle Juice Party this Satur-

A lot of people believe that someday
computers will do all their thinking
for them.
Well, a funny thing is going to
happen on the way to the future:
You’re going to have to think
harder and longer than ever.

Computers can't dream up things
like Picturephone service, Telstar®
satellite, and some of the other
advances in communications we
have made. Of course, we depended
on computers to solve some of the
problems connected with their
development. But computers need
absolutely clear and thorough
instructions, which means a new and
tougher discipline on the
human intelligence.
And it will take more than a computer
to create a pocket phone the size
of a matchbook, let's say... or find

a practical way to lock a door or turn
off an oven by remote telephone
control, or to make possible some of
the other things we’ll have someday.
It takes individuals... perhaps you
could be
launching new

one...

ideas, proposing innovations
and dreaming dreams.

And someday, we’re going to have to
find a way to dial locations in space.
Makes you think.

®Bell

System

American Telephone &amp; Telegraph
and Associated Companies

�Friday, May 6, 1966

SPECTRUM

BRANIFF INTERNATIONAL
FLIES UNITED STATES
MEXICO

SOUTH AMERICA

and
OFFERS YOU A CAREER
IN THE SKY

-

Basketball Schedule Completion Near
By STEVE SCHUELEIN

State and Philadelphia Textile
(famous for the weave) in the

Although this time of year is

Palestra.

most closely associated with baseball, football
even out of season
seems to be the topic of

of

—

REQUIREMENTS

Age: 20-27
Marital: Single

Height: 5*2" to 5*9"
Weight; Max. 135
Education: H.S. graduate
Vision: 20/50 or better
Contacts accepted
Conversational Spanish desirable

First year salary up to $448 per month
with periodic increases to $588 plus
liberal expense allowance.

Write to Employment Mgr.,
Bra niff International
P.O. Box 35001
Dallas, Texas 75235
Local interviews to be conducted at a
later date.

An Equal Opportunity Emloyer

Although the remaining third

the

tentative

schedule

is

bogged down with its annual sur-

—

main interest on campus at the
moment. So which sport do you
think athletic director baseball
coach Jim Peelle is busiest with
at the moment? Baseball? Football? Wrong on both counts.
Although football and baseball

feit of chaff, it is much better
than might have been expected
after the disastrous support you,
the student, gave the team last

•

FLIGHT HOSTESS
Wear the world famous Pucci
fashions as you fly in the most
fascinating career for women
today.

KLBVW

'

year.

And if Peelle can succeed in

gluing together the loose ends to
his Christmas Tournament plans
and find reputable teams to fill
the Aud openings, the schedule
may turn out as attractive as last
year's ambitious endeavor.
The second part to the problem Peelle faces might have been
avoided by some foresight on
Canisius' Bob MacKinnon’s part.
He didn't give Peelle the two

are certainly occupying a good

share of Peelle’s time, basketball is the main item on Peellc’s
agenda now.
Unseasonably stuffy

as this
sport may sound in this b-b-beautiful month of May, it is nevertheless one which must be taken
care of schedule-wise by the end
of this school year. And although most of the schedule has
Aud dates until last month.
already been taken care of,
‘T’ve been in touch with Holy
Peelle is currently negotiating the Cross, Brown and numerous other
possibilities of a Christmas Tourbig schools," said Peelle, "and
nament as well as trying to fill most of them replied that they
two Memorial Auditorium dates would have loved to play us on
for Saturday evenings.
those dates if they had only
Among the more prominent known earlier. They’re not going
teams already booked to meet to wait until the end of April
the Bulls in the Aud next year to fill prime Saturday night
are Syracuse, Cornell, Niagara,
dates."
and Buffalo State. In Clark Gym
“If Bobby MacKinnon would
the Herd will face, among others, only give us the dates in time,"
the University of California at
concluded Peelle, "there would be
Santa Barbara. St. Michael's of no problem as far as getting big
Vermont and Washington Uniteams playing us as part of their
versity of St. Louis. How’s that
doublehcadcrs."
for geographic distribution?
So it appears Jim Peclle can
On the road Len Scrfustini’s
shed no tears for us, the stuforces will face such teams as dents, this month
all we have
Colgate, Northern Illinois, Kent
to worry about arc finals.
—

Colgate Blanks Netmen
Jt

-_

*

:

■

■

t*’
i

£

d

.

‘‘

JH VH

fllpP,
F

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|

’*»■

Coach Sanford award. Dr. Ban
Celnik.r Mo.t Valuable Player
Trophy to Pet. Lederman.
photo

by

Edward jo,c'tyn

The UB tennis team became
Colgate’s 11th victim in 13 matches by dropping a 6-0 verdict to
the Red Raiders at the UB courts
Tuesday. The doubles were cancelled, partly due to the indentent weather and partly due to
their inconsequence to the out
come of the match. The Bulls
are now 5 3
After the match. Coach Bill
Sanford awarded the Ben Celmk
er Most Valuable Player Trophy
to
The netmen hosted

SI

Bona

venture Wednesday and traveled
to Niagara Thursday, both matches in which the Bulls assumed
the role of heavy favorite.
The Bulls conclude their busy
schedule by playing Alfred at
home today at 3 p m
journey
to Portland Saturday and
in
«, ,
visiting Geneseo on Monday.
,

INTRAMURALS
By STEVE FARBMAN
'My congratulations to AEPi

don't think anyone expected
them to win it five years in a
row." These were the words of
Edwin D. Muto, Director of Intramurals, after he had presented
the Lawrence E, Palhowitz
Trophy to AEPi in his office

Tuesday.
The trophy, donated by AEPi,
is given each year to the fraternity intramural champion Since
this is the fifth year in succession in which AEPi has won the
trophy, the fraternity retires it.

"The Lawrence Palhowitz Memorial," said Steve Schulman, former master of AEPi, "has been a
great victory for us. This trophy
is the result of five years of cooperation and vigorous participation in college athletics. Thanks
go out to all brothers who participated and supported these athletic events.”
Commenting on the intramural

YOUR BEST

DRESS SLACKS
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•

EL

PASO, TEXAS

program in general, Schulman
hoped that “next year will be
as profitable as the past one.
Sports competition has added
much to the spirit on this campus, and we hope this spirit is

maintained through the coming
years.”
The brothers of AEPi will donate another trophy next year
to replace the Palhowitz Trophy
they have just retired.

Mr, Muto thanked all fraternities for their interest in the intramural program. "They were
the backbone of the intramural
program. It has been a good
year. We tried to do the best
we could with limited time and
facilities. I am looking forward
to another good year come next

September.”

The results of the volleyball
tournament, played two weeks
ago, were made official this week.
In the semi-finals, the Joques
downed APD, 15-5,
and
AEPi stopped Sig Ep, 15-9, 15-13.
In the finals AEPi prevailed over
the Joques by scores of 15-10 and
15-11.
The final PaUiowitz Trophy
standings:
1 AEPi
424
2. SAM
395 5
3. Gamma Phi
389
386 5
4 Phi Ep
5 Sig Ep
359
6 Alpha Sig
295
Theta
285 5
7.
Chi
8 Beta Sig
266

9 AKPsi

10. Pi Lambda Tau
11. Phi Psi

12. TEKE
13. APO

253 5
237.5
2315
225-5
123

96
Phi Lambda Delta
15 APD
78.5
Farb says have a good TIME
this summer and I'll see you next
14

September.

�Friday, May

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

¥

4

-

Ht==

_/

Varsity-Alumni GameTonight
The “New Look" of UB football
will be on display tonight when
the UB Varsity plays the UB
Alumni at the Williamsville High
School field at 8 o'clock in a
game which is the traditional
closing of spring practice.
Richard "Doc” Urich, the new
coach of the Bulls, has discarded
the conservative winged-T offense
and has installed in its place the
exciting “I” Formation, featuring
Dick Ashley, the Bulls’ recordbreaking pass receiver, at split
end.
At quarterback for the varsity
will be Mick Murtha who was
Most Valuable Back on last season’s freshman club. Steve Svec,
another yearling, will be at left
halfback, with veteran Jim Barksdale at right halfback and Lee
Jones, last year’s leading rusher,
at fullback. This is the backfield which gained more than 400
yards total offense in last Saturday’s intra-squad game,
Urich had originally planned
to install the Notre Dame 4-man
front defense, but he now feels
that he does not have the material
to do so. Consequently, during

•%

’

Hofheins Heroics Lead
Bulls To Seventh Win

■

day.

All Hofheins did was enter in
the fourth inning with the bases
loaded, none out and two runs
already in. He got out of this jam
without any further damage via
a strikeout and a double-play
ball. The Buffalo sophomore then
pitched the remaining five innings, allowing only one earned
run, striking out ten and walking
none.

MICK MURTHA

STEVE SVEC

the 1966 season, the Bulls will
use a 7-diamond defense, with
variations.
Among the former UB players
who will play for the Alumni

fensive end last season; Gordy
Bukaty, one of UB’s all-time quarterback greats; Jim Webber, last
year’s No. 1 tailback; fullback
Dennis Przykuta, who won letters
the past three seasons; Center Joe
Garofolo, defensive halfback Fred
Geringer, ends Dennis Burden and
Jim McNamara, tackle Jim Ratel
and placekicking specialist Joe
Oscsodal, all from last year’s
club; Nate Bliss, Leo Ratamess,
Jim McNally, Bob Edward, Bruce
Hart, Mike Lucidi, Ron Clayback,
Jack Dempsey, Jim Wolfe, Paul
Gagliardi, John Michno, Gerry
Gergley, Dan Stanley, Joe Shifflet, Steve Salasny, Jim Ryan,
Lou Reale, Bill O’Neil, Fred Kogut and Jack Daniels.
The Alumni will be coached
by Mike Stock, UB Freshman

on Friday night

Fountain, E.C.A.C.

PMi

are Gerry

La

All-East de-

r".

te

jk

fn

ji
.

s
By RICH BAUMGARTEN
The UB baseball team, getting
great performances from its
sophomore players, came up with
another promising prospect named
George Hofheins as the Bulls
made their record 7-2 by defeating host Canisius, 6-4, Mon-

i

■'

UB, trailing 2-1 in the top of
the seventh, rallied for four runs
and made its lead stand behind
single
Hofheins. Fran Buchta’s
and Jim Duprey’s sacrifice fly
were the big blows in the inning.

Friday’s game is the 7th of the
series; the Varsity leads, 4-2, having won last year’s contest, 33-7.
The Alumni last won in 1963,
31-16.

.

fc**

Tickets for the game are $1.00,
with net proceeds going to the
UB Scholarship Fund. UB students will be admitted free.

»•£
. &lt;i ',
w8riielBPa&gt;t
«*

..

■

JIM BARKSDALE

LEE JONES

Trackmen 2nd at LeMoyne; Host Tourney Tomorrow
The UB track team placed second in a field of seven in the

LeMoyne Relays at Syracuse Monday, Host LeMoyne won the meet
with 25 points, while UB scored
12, ECTI 9, RIT 4, Harpur and
Siena 2. and Canisius 1.
Led by anchorman Dick Genau,
the Bulls took three seconds, a
third and a fourth in the five
events
LeMoyne star Bill Ripple led
the Green Dolphins to first place
in all five events.

The UB frosh finished last with
one point in the freshman meet.
At 1 p.m. tomorrow at Rotary
Field, UB will host the 14th An-

Varsity

Varsity
Varsity
Varsity
•Golf
Varsity
Varsity

**Varsity
Varsity
**Varsity
**

nual UB Invitational Track Meet.
Defending champion Rochester
and powerful Brockport are the
morning line co-favorites to win

the tourney.
The Bulls, who have won their
own tournament six times in the
last 13 years, are considered
remote longshots to finish anywhere near the top this year.
The Bulls should make their
presence felt to some degree,
however. Distance-runner Dick
Genau, sprinter Art Walker, shot
putter Ted Gibbons, pole vaulters
Tom Ryan and Milt Seiger and
the 440 relay team of Walker,
Jim Webber. Jim McEwen and

1965-66 ATHLETIC RECORD,
Won Lost
Football . . .
3
5
Basketball .
8
14
4
Cross Country
6
4
Fencing . . .
12
8
2
9
Swimming . .
5
Wrestling . .
5
5
Baseball
7
2
Tennis
3
6
Track
2
3
TOTALS

72

Tied
2

41

•1st place in Brook Lea Invitational at Rochester and
1st place in E.C.A.C. Regional Tournament at
Syracuse

••as

of May 3.

GEORGE HOFHEINS

in a doubleheader at home Wednesday, UB will travel to Niagara
for another twin bill Saturday.
The Bulls close their season at
Rochester Tuesday . . . The UB
freshmen, now 3-1, conclude

their schedule with four consecutive home games. The Baby Bulls
meet Brockport Saturday, Rochester Tuesday and Bryant-Stratton
in a doubleheader Wednesday.

Students may turn in
their AFROTC Uniforms
and books to T/Sgt. O’Brien in Room 7, Clark
Gym, between 8:30 and
4 p.m. May 6 through

Coach

%

6. 1966

May 27.
FRAN BUCHTA
Buchta and Bon Leiser each
had two singles, while Ken Rutkowski hit his seventh double of
the year for UB. Bill Cleary and
Tom Pitz each had three hits for
Canisius.

Freshmen returning for
the Fall Semetser who
want to keep their uniforms over the summer
should notify T/Sgt. O’Brien before May 27.

Jon Berkhoudt should figure prominently in the scoring.
Other schools competing include Niagara, Canisius, Buffalo
State, Alfred and ECTI.
UB will close its season with a
home meet against Niagara on

Tuesday.

Alterman and Brennan
Win Sports Trivia
Danny Alterman and

Mark

Brennan became the first repeat

of the Spectrum
sports trivia contest by sharing
first-place honors in Tuesday’s
contest with five correct answers
each. Danny had earlier been a
winner in the April 19 quiz,
while Mark gained top honors in
the April 22 contest.
champions

This was the final trivia test
of the year, but due to the enthusiasm with which it was greeted, it is hoped to continue it
next fall.
Tuesday’s answers:

1—Mel Ott. 2—Babe Herman. 3—
Bing Miller. 4—2-1. 5—Windy McCall. 6—60 feet. 7—Chip Hilton,
8—Johnny Evers. 9—Tony Oliva.
10—GeorgeStallings.

UB BASEBALL TEAM
BASEBALL NOTES; Rutkowski’s double was his fifth of the
year against Western New York
competition, a record—and he
still has two games against Niagara remaining ... Tim Uraskevitch
leads the pitchers in ERA with
0.80... Close behind are Rutkowski, 1.41, Don Potwora, 1.56, and
Ron McEwan and Dick Pirozzolo,
1.80 each . . . Only 4 seniors—Me
Ewan, Duprey, Bob Pusateri and
Fred Geringer—will be lost from
this year’s team, leaving the Bulls
with a rosy diamond future
After having met St. Bonaventure
.

.

.

SPECTRUM
CLASSIFIED
ADS

SELL!

Room 355
Norton Union

�</text>
                  </elementText>
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EXTRA

EXTRA

VOLUME 16

BUFFALO, HEW YORK, THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1966

Senate Resolution Opposes
Use of Campus Facilities;
Upholds Privacy of Grades
the Selective Service Test.
“Allowing the students to take
the test on campus is a service
muchc the same as providing applications for a 2S deferment for
the student.” Senator Daniel
Rotholz said that by accepting
the test on campus we “accept
the administration’s decision as
fair. We accept the validity of
the criteria used by the draft
board.”
Senator R. Curtiss Montgomery
argued that this is just another
“IBM test being offered by a
private corporation and the University has agreed to administer
the test. The University is not
accepting the Selective Service
package; they feel it is a convenience for the student. The
same test—good, bad, indifferent
—is going to be given to the
student.”
This resolution was passed:
Whereas, it is the traditional
power of the University to set
its own standards for membership in the academic community,
and
Whereas, the University would
abdicate this power by a) con-

is at stake. Maintenance of this
integrity is worth a short walk
to Hayes Hall. There is nothing
to keep the student from requesting his grades and sending them
to the draft board.
“I make the assumption that
the University would make grades
available to the student.”
President Clinton Deveaux said
he believes that at the present
time a student could request that
his grades not be sent, but it is
the University’s policy to send
all grades to the draft board
except the grades of those who
had otherwise requested.
He further explained, “Transcripts sent by the student are
not considered official by the
draft board. Only transcripts sent senting to automatically supply
by the University are considered
the Selective Service with grades
official.”
and academic record, and, b) conSenator Marion Michaels said
senting to lend its facilities to
she did not believe that the govthe Selective Service for the adernment is an outside power; ministration of a draft deferment
many students claim affiliation
examination, therefore, be it rewith it. “You are a part of the solved that the Student Senate
government. This is not the place proposes:
to disagree. The place of disagree1. That the University shall not
ment is the use of the exam and
send the academic record of
form of the exam.”
the student unless specifically requested to do so by
Treasurer Carl Levine affirmed, “A student's grades are his
the individual student to the
personal property. The governSelective 'Service.
ment shall not infringe on a stu2. That the University shall in
dent’s personal property.” Mr.
no way lend its facilities to
Levine said that he does not
the Selective Service for the
believe students should “have to
administration of the defergo all the way downtown” to take
ment examination.

WHO
,

A resolution proposing that the
University not send grades to the
Selective Service unless requested
by the individual students and
not lend its facilities to the Selective Service for the administration of the Selective Service
Exam was passed by the Student
Senate last night.
Senator Joe Gershowitz, who
proposed the resolution, asserted,
‘The integrity of the University

I?

tttotsm

Public Meeting Tonight;

GFCSS Sit-In Ended 'University'

After more than forty-five
hours of continual demonstration,
members and supporters of the
Graduate-Faculty Committee on
the Selective Service ended their
‘sitin’ at the office of Dr. Clifford C. Furnas.
Th# retiring UB President proposed an alternative to GFCSS
demands for his appearance at
a public meeting to discuss the
administrative decisions to administer the Selective Service Deferment Examination on Campus.
On Monday, May 2, Graduatefaculty Committee members expressed their opposition to the
examination and the decision to
administer it at the University
in a special meeting with Dr.
■ urnas. When the President refused to reconsider the decision
or to act upon two alternatives
presented by the GFCSS, the committee demanded that he appear
at a public meeting. Dr. Furnas
refused this request and the sit-in
began.

Praaidont Fumat rapliad to a
similar invitation by the Student
Association with an alternate

proposal to his appearance. He
nformed Student Association
President Clinton Deveaux that
he would supply a statement to
be read at a public meeting and

that Presidential Assistant Dr. A.
Westley Rowland and Mr. Allan

Kuntz who is

responsible for the
original decision to administer
the exam, would appear at that
meeting.
Furnat reported agreed to
highly consider" thoir recom&gt;

mendations.

The GFCSS deemed this alternative sufficient to end demonstrations and redirect their efforts toward the original goals
as they relate to the administration of the examination. In a
statement released to the Spectrum, the Graduate-Faculty Committee stated: “This proposal is
a first step toward the recognition of our existence as peers
within the academic community
and therefore fulfills the major
portion of the sit-in objectives.
"Having established this precedent, we shall continue to assert
the right of the academic community to have a voice in defining administration policy."

An Open Public Forum on tho
draft, co-sponsored by the Student
Association and the GraduateFaculty Committee on the Selective Service will be held tonight in the Fillmore Hoorn at
7:00.
Tonight members of the administration and the Student Senate will discuss and debate the
current plan to administer the
Selective Service Examination on
campus.

emphasized

Presidential
to discuss f
affect the
The recoil
the Senate I
At a meet'
livered the
olution to Dr.
Deveaux, Pres,
sodation, said
rejected the
the open form
send Dr. Rowl;
in his place.
to "highly consider’
mendations.
Dr. Pumas v
fered to release

Dr. A. Westley Rowland, Assistant to the Pres., and Mr. Allan
Kuntz, the person who originally
made the decision to administer
the exam on campus, will speak
for the administration.
NEW PROGRAM
Dr. Rowland and Mr. Kunti ara Mr. Deveaux 1
While the Graduate-Faculty spooking in response to a Student ing.
Committee has continually exMr. Deveaux
Senate resolution sent to Presipressed their opposition to predent Furnas asking him to attend nas’ offer to tht
senting the deferment examina“sitting-in” outside
a public meeting to “discuss and
tion on campus, they hope now to clarify” the decision.
office. He also r
concentrate on one area which
the open meetinr
Although Dr. Rowland and Mr.
has not been of immediate conKuntz have not been delegated Wednesday
cern.
Wednesday
the authority to change the presCommittee members will seek ent exam plans, (heir advice will the GPCSS members
support from faculty, students be “highly considered” by Presithe vigil in ’
and administration to request dent Furnas.
ered accepting
that the University refuse to
Student Senate involvement in proposal. After
supply draft boards with such the draft issue came Tuesday at bate it was decided
proposal as made
information os grade-point averan emergency meeting called by
age and the class standing of University College senators to and to redirect
efforts into
students.
consider a resolution urging PresThis approach it taan at adident Furnas to attend “a public discussion at
vantageous in that specific inThe sit-in
meeting open to all members of
p.m. A statement .
stances of rising faculty support the academic community.''
The resolution did not express was issued dedaring
are rumored, and that GFCSS
supporters feel that such an any preference of sides on the nas’ proposal wi
toward the full
issue would create a rallying question of whether campus fapoint for the three segments of cilities should be used to adthe faculty and
policy”.
the academic community.
minister the exam, but rather fining adr' 1
’

-’

Deveaux concluded.

�Thursday, May 5, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Editorial Comment

.

.

Nationwide

.

Support For
GFCSS Sit-In

•TEST

Graduate Students May
Find Draft Test Necessary
It is likely that some Local
Draft Boards will insist that even
graduate students in residence
must qualify for deferment by
passing the Selective Service Examination if they cannot establish
their rank-in-class in which they
graduated, according to a bulletin
issued recently by the Council of
Graduate Schools in the United
States.
The bulletin announces that the
Office of Selective Service has
therefore set another test date
on June 24 and will announce a
new deadline for registration
within a few days.
Dr. Alt of the Council of Graduate Schools in the United States
said that the new exam will be
the same kind of exam as the
others.
The bulletin, received by the
UB Graduate School Dean May 2,
reads:
“We are informed that very few
graduate students already in re*-

idence registered for the Selective Service Examinations, relying
on the assurance that their deferment would be continued as long
as they maintain good scholastic
standing.
"Since decisions on deferment
are the primary responsibility of

the Local Draft Boards and since

many of these interpret directives

very literally, it is likely that
some Boards will insist that even
graduate students in residence
must qualify by passing the test
if they cannot establish their
rank-in-class in which they graduated.
“Deans are requested to inform
their students of these facts and
urge them to register for the
examination unless they can clearly establish their rank in class.
Dr. Alt commented that the
Selective Service people were
very surprised that only about
1 out of 5 graduate students had
signed up to take the exams.

Special Senate Session
Urges Public Discussion
By LORETTA ANGELINE
At an emergency meeting of
the Student Senate Tuesday,
May 3, a resolution was passed
which “urgently requests that the
President of the University attend a public meeting open to all
members of the academic community to discuss and clarify
the decision regarding the ad-

ate College at Buffalo
rms Anti-S.5. Committee
A recently formed student-facuHy committee on Selective Service at the State College presented the College’s President, Dr.
Bulger, with a statement late
Wednesday afternoon asking him
to ban the Selective Service tests
from the State campus.
A committee of nine students
and two faculty members met
with President Bulger at four
The committee read the prestatement and

pared

posed

a

number of questions.
In addition to requesting the
ban of the Selective Service testing, the committee called for an
end to the College's policy of
supplying local draft boards with

student

grades.
we feel that when our
sofcool
submits our regular grades
U) the
Selective Service it is giving away personal information
.

.

about us without permission.
The statement went on to say,
“we would like to draw your
attention to the examples which
have been set by Rutgers, the
State University of New Jersey,
and also Syracuse University.
Both of these schools have announced that they will refuse to
give away grades to the Army.
“It would not only be proper
but also admirably courageous"
to refuse campus facilities to the
Selective Service for tests and
to deny it access to student
grades.
Should these demands not be

met the statement then called

for an open meeting of the university community to debate the
matter. The committee also called
for a student faculty referendum
on the issue of university cooperation with the Selective Service.

ice Examination on this cam
pus.”
During discussion of the resolution, Dean Sigglekow said,
“The Senate is barking at the
wrong dog. This is not President
Furnas’ decision.” A notice was
brought into the meeting which
disclosed that Dr. Alan Kuntz,
Head of the Educational Testing
Center, had made the final decision to administer the examination on campus.
Steve Crafts, member of the
Graduate Faculty Committee on
Selective Service (GFCSS), “This
buck-passing is an appalling presumption. It indicates a basic
lack of concern."
Raymond Volpe asked Dean
Sigglekow, “How do we distinguish between delegating authority and delegating responsibility?”
The Dean answered, “He (Furnas) is not superman. No one can
expect any President to know
everything. He can take responsibility, but logically you should
take the issue to President Gould
in Albany.”
Student Senate President Clinton Deveaux took the resolution
to President Furnas’ office where
approximately 50 student and
faculty members were staging
a sit-in. Mr. Deveaux invited the
President to attend a public meeting Wednesday, May 3 at 3 p.m.
Mr. Deveaux said, “President
Furnas is ‘appreciative’ of the
Senate's action."
Mr. Deveaux said that President Furnas agreed to request
Dr. Kuntz to attend the public
meeting. Dr. Furnas added, ac-

cording to Mr. Deveaux, that he
will not change the decision un-

less Dr. Kuntz requests it.
GFCSS members Larry Faulkner and Steve Crafts then talked
to President Furnas. They reported that he agreed to send
Dr. Rowland, Special Assistant to
the President, to the meeting
with Dr. Kuntz. Dr. Furnas agreed
to send a prepared statement
giving the rationale for the decision to give the Selective Service Exam on this campus, and
explaining the role of the student in administration decisions.
“If the members of the sit-in
were not satisfied after the meeting, they were invited to come
back and the doors will be open,”
reported Mr. Faulkner.

The Graduate Faculty Committee on the Selective Service
(GFCSS) has received support
from groups across the nation.
Faculty and student organizations in the State University system had been contacted for support. Telegrams were sent to
President Samuel B. Gould from
organizations at Harpur, Cornell,
Syracuse, Fredonia, Buffalo State
and Cortland. Cornell offered to
send picketers.
The Young Socialist Alliance,
picketing for academic freedom
Tuesday in Boston, offered to
include the GFCSS’ demands in
their march.
National SDS headquarters in
Chicago promised to inform SDS
chapters throughout the country
about the sit-in and to ask for
their cooperation.
New York City colleges were
asked to send telegrams to Dr.
Gould requesting his help in
persuading Dr. Furnas to meet
with the University community.
The Vietnam Day Committee at
Berkeley contacted Dean Meyerson for his cooperation.
A

telegram signed by Terry

Seal, President of the Republican Club, Martin Feinrider, President of the Ripon Society, Paul
Nussbaum, Founder of Young
Democrats and Rick Salter of
SDS, was sent to Dr. Furnas and
Dr. Gould asserting that it is the
responsibility of the UB president to meet with the entire academic community to discuss
such “important issues as the
administration of the Selective
Service Examination on campus.”
The telegram reads, “We support
the GFCSS sit-in and urge you to
accede to their demands for your

attendance at a

university-wide

meeting.”

Buffalo State SDS sent a letter

to support the sit-in. The letter
states that the University admin-

istrator “like their autonomy
when they can use it to control
the students and faculty, but
when it comes to an outside force
like the Army, the University
We
knuckles right under
think it is simply unfair and arbitrary for the Administration,
led by President Furnas, not even
to consider the alternatives proposed by the GFCSS.”
The GFCSS sent telegrams to
...

Dean Martin

Meyerson

and Pres-

ident Gould asking them to urge
President Furnas to accede to
their request and inviting Dean
Meyerson and Dr. Gould to participate in the ensuing public
meeting. Similar telegrams were
delivered ot Senator Kennedy,
Governor Rockefeller and Senator Javits.

Sit-In Provokes Comments
A&amp;S Council Considers Draft
;

By JOAN ROBERTS

The sit-in by the GraduateFaculty Committee on the Selective Service (GFCSS) provoked

comments from several administrators and members of the fac-

ulty.

Dr. A. Westley Rowland, Special Assistant to the President,
said that he and other administrators would meet with the
GFCSS at an open discussion,
but that he saw no reason for
Dr. Furnas to attend. “The decision has been made;” he explained, “we will not change the
decision.” He added that the
Selective Service tesst will be
administered as planned.
Dean of Students, Richard Siggelkow said that the issue should
have been brought to the Senate
by the GFCSS prior to the sit-in,
since the Senate was the “appropriate body.” He also faoted

that the resolution passed by
the Senate was “very poorly
worded.”
The Executive Council of the
College of Arts and Sciences
met Tuesday afternoon and passed
a resolution which the Council

members would not disclose. Dr.
Thomas Connolly, English professor and Council member, commented, “I am opposed to the
use of academic means and devices (grades, class standings,
etc.) for non-academic purposes.
When they’re used for these
purposes they tend to confuse
and interfere with the normal,
academic day-to-day business of
the university.”
Council chairman Dr, Myles
Slatin said, “I and other members
have been concerned about the
use of grades by the Selective
Service . . . several faculty members have indicated to me that
it would be wise to investigate
the situation.”

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STATE UNIVERSITY

VOLUME 16

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MAY 3, 1966

NO. 43

Graduate Faculty Sit-in
Fifteen students, many of them
graduate students and teaching
fellows, started a “sit-in” in the
outer offices of President Clifford Furnas yesterday afternoon
at 1 p.m. This action climaxed a
series of meetings which began
over a month ago initiated by the
Graduate Faculty Committee on
the Selective Service and was
the direct result of a confronta-

tion with Pres Furnas earlier
that morning.
A week ago Pres. Furnas refused to meet with representatives of the Committee to discuss
“the complicity of the University
with the military" and the university's decision to administer
the National Draft Deferment test
on this campus. However, when
approached again by the GFCSS,
he granted an interview for Mon-

GFCSS Members meet with Furnas

day

at 10 a.m.
that meeting

At

thirty-four

members of the committee each
presented Pres. Furnas with individual letters proposing alternatives to the administration of the
Selective Service Exam. These
included a request that the exam

be given off campus without the
benefit of university facilities,
and a request that if the exam
should be given on campus, that
the university include a “disclaimer" stating that the university does not sanction this "nonacademic" examination and is
giving it under duress.
Pres. Furnas rejected the proposals and after a short discussion further refused to address
a public meeting to explain the
administration’s position.
The GFCSS then held an emergency meeting on the second
floor of Norton to discuss Pres.
Furnas’ refusals. After lengthy
and heated debate concerning university autonomy, the encroachment of the military on academic
affairs, and the involvement of
the University of Buffalo in State

University policies, two graduate
students left the meeting and
began a spontaneous "sit-in” in
Hayes Hall.
Several people at the meeting
followed suit and telegrams to
President-Elect Myerson and
President Gould were sent soon

afterward informing them of the
demonstration and requesting
their presence at the proposed

public meeting. A picket line expressing sympathy with the demonstrators was organized ten-minutes later displaying signs such
as: "Who is Responsible?", "We

shall be heard"
The spontaneous nature of the
demonstration made immediate
reaction difficult on the part of
the administration and apart from
a request from the secretaries to
keep the fire lanes open, there
was no immediate comment.
Graduate students hoped by this
action to dramatize their deep
concern over the "abdication of
responsibility" on the part of the
university administration and the
tendency to create a “privileged
class” of college students not subject to the draft. A spokesman

for the committee stated “that
the draft test and the granting of
2-S classification for college stu
dents makes the economically
and educationally deprived carry
the awesome burden of politics
and war.”

Senate Defeats Resolution Urging
Furnas to Meet With the GFCSS
A resolution urging President
Furnas to meet with any groups
concerned about the use of University

facilities for the defer-

SDS Plans Test
As Counter to
Defeated Candidates Contest Election Draft Exams
Of Delegates to NSA Congress
Sit-In when their requests are denied.

in election procedure concerning
the April 25 National Student
Association delegates elections
has been submitted to Elections
Committee chairman Barry Bienstock and Student Elections Court

chairman Donald

Eddy.

The four winning candidates
in the election are Kim Darrow,
who received 174 votes: Elen

Cardone, 154; Stewart Edelstein,

86; and Saralee Rubenstein, 86.

Defeated were Martin Feinrider, who received 77 votes; Daniel
Rotholz, 72; Robert Weiner, 75;

write-in candidates Donald Rich,
34 votes; Frank Klinger, 48; Ivan
Makuch, 46; and Stephen Sickler, 5. Write-in candidates receiving less than 2 votes were not

recorded.

A petition signed by Donald
Rich, Frank Klinger and Ivan
Makuch states that the complaint
of irregularities is lodged specifically against an elections teller who allegely asked votes such
questions as, “Do you know who
you're voting for?”

The petition says that when the
teller saw this voter cast his
ballot for Rich, Klinger and Makuch, he commented, “They arc
members of YAF" (Young Americans for Freedom).
The petitioners have maintained that an elections teller should

not vl

ballot.

contend, “implicit in the
question ‘do you know who you're
.voting for?’ is, if the voter replies in the negative, the teller
would supply an answer."
have

The complaint states, ’’informing voters about candidates is the
when
business of politicians
this ‘voter education’ is under(it) betaken by a teller

comes pure electioneering
finding a lack of such impartiality, we are asking for action from
the Elections Committee or the
Judiciary on this matter, wherever the jurisdiction may rest.”

The petition mentions that
while petitioners Rich and Makuch are YAF members, Mr.
Klinger is not. The signers said
that they will welcome a properly run new election.

Chancellor Furnas will
discuss “Is It Science or
Engineering?” at the
Sigma Xi meeting tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the Conference Theater. The
public is invited.
Newly elected Astron-

are:

omy Club officers
President, Larry Carlino;
Vice President, Bill Lutz;
Secretary, Robert Martin; Treasurer, John Ul-

rich.

Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) has announced plans
for a nationwide distribution of
literature and a "eounter-dnift
test" calling for “an examination
of conscience" to be administered
on each of the three Selective
Service Examination dates. May
14, May 21 and June 3.

A statement

issued

by SDS
reads: “Wherever the Selective
Service System sets up its examination centers, we’ll be there
with our own exams. Ours will
ask you questions about the war
—fair and objective questions—and about how you sec your
relation to it and what kind of
government ours has become."
The statement continues.
“Thinking through some of our
questions will make you a little
shakier, a little freer—and a
little prouder of your own con-

ment test and the revealing of
grades to the draft board was
introduced and defeated at the
Senate meeting last

Wednesday.

Vice President Kim Darrow,
who introduced the resolution,
asserted that the University
should neither send grades or
class standings to draft boards
nor lend the use of University
facilities for giving the student
deferment test.

Mr. Peter Faulkner, member of

the Graduate-Faculty Committee
on the Selective Service, spoke

said that by voluntarily turning
over class standings to draft
boards, the University would be
giving up its traditional right
to decide its own membership.
Mr. Faulkner suggested, “the Uni
versity’s lending itself to outside

bers by a petition of at least 10%
of the students in the school or
division which the member represents. Upon receiving the petition the Election Committee
would hold a referendum; if a
majority of those voting would
be in favor of it, the representatives would be recalled and the
Election Committee would arrange for an election to fill the
vacated seat within 2 weeks.

The Senate passed an amendment making a formal hearing
before the Student Judiciary
mandatory in order to remove a
there has been so definite procedure for removal of lower court

judges.
The amendment proposed at
the April 20th Senate meeting

which provided for the reeogni-

science.”
Describing the current nation-

al situation, SDS maintains, “The
business and the military have
decided to be fair to each other
about sharing us. Some of us

are not so bright, or perhaps
have been laqy scholars. Businessmen dont need them They can
go be soldiers.
“The message of the Selective
and middle-class, and a Dean’s
Service Exam is: If you're white
List kind of guy, relax. If you re
not, fal in.”

Disputing the Selective Service
Exam, the statement reads: "On
the basis of our answers to questions about poems and physics
and geometry, we will or will
not be eligible for the draft, will
or will not be sent to Vietnam,
maybe to kill to maybe to die.”

Larry

Faulkner addresses Senate on GFCSS Draft Resolution
Photo by Almn

as an administrative
arm, undermining autonomy, is
of great harm to the student."

interests

An amendment was proposed at
the meeting which provides for
the student recall of Senate mem-

Gruber

lion of any group on campus having a constitution and faculty
advisor was defeated. The present policy of not recognizing
any group whose goats or ideas
are repetitious of a recognized
group will be maintained.

�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, May

3, 1966

Freshman Class Honor Societies
Formally Induct New Members

Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman
women's hpnor society, and Phi
Eta Sigma, the national honor
society for freshman men, have
formally inducted their new

A.
Center, Kathleen
Cullen,
Nancy M. Czeehowsi, Ellen M.
Fuoto, Carolyn J. Gifford, Marsha
R. Gold, Lee A. Golden, Judith

E, Gutherman, Gail J- Guzzo,
Renee G. Hartstein, Elaine S.
Hill, Judith A. Holland, Kathleen
New members of Alpha R. Holmes, Rosalind A. Jarrett,
Lambda Delta are: Caroline E. Jacqueline S. Kopell, Beverly R.
Arnold, Wendy A. Bannisterv-HKray, Bonnie
M. Lantiegne,
Mary L. Bcllhouse, Suzanne J.
Sandra S. Lippman, Linda K.
Berberian, Kay 1 A. Branagan, ’ Reiss, Nan C. Rose, Rayme G.
Marcia M. Brin, Deanne Brzezin- Rosenzweig, Tilley Roth, Carol
ski, Fern Budow, Marie L. Gala- A. Silberman, Rosalind E. Snider,
bria, Susan W. Casner, Kathleen
Julia B. Sutton, Dorothy T. Triffo,

members.

Cadets
were

pre-

Forty-one awards
scnted to cadets for eontributions to UB and the Air Force
ROTC during the 16th Annual

AreHonored For Services
Awards Day Program April 26.
After the ceremony, Cadet Capt.
David McDowell accepted command of the 575th Wing from

Meeting of Faculty Tomorrow
Dean Robert L. Ketter has
called a special meeting of the
Graduate Faculty tomorrow in

response to a petition signed by
more than 25 members of the

Graduate Faculty.

The petition calls for a reconsideration of the action taken by
the Council of the Graduate
School Jan, 21, 1966 approving

■p.’vj

Frances M. Volbert, Melody M.
Weller and Laraine M. Wirtzer.
The new members of Phi Eta
Sigma are: Herman W Coles HI,
Robert K. Crone, Leslie N.
Csonka, Philip J. Federico, Stephen M. Gagola, Jr., Lawernce
C. Henig, Thomas A. McGaw, H.
Todd Miller, Robert R. Osborn,
Eliot M. Raiken, Gerald M. Scholl,
Neal Slatkin, Harry K. Slocum,
Bruce R. Telzer, Stephen W.
Warren, James B. Westfall, Karl
A, Wilson, Wayne P. Silverman
and Harold Weinstein.

in principle the report on “cornmunity college faculty

education”

and instructing the dean of the

Graduate School to proceed “with
discussions and negotiations and
with the preparation of a proP08 ? 1 for l j)e establishment of
an institute.

The meeting will be held
3 p.m, in room 5 Acheson.

at

Cadet Col. David W. Wozniak.
The Chancellor’s Gold Award
for superior academic and military leadership was presented
to Cadet Lt. Col. Paul E. Kopycinski for his outstanding performance as a staff officer.
Cadet Col. James Lumley won
the Lawrence D. Bell Award for
the most outstanding Air Force
ROTC graduate for flight training. Cadet Col. Lumley started
his pilot training in August,
1965, in a Cessna 150. By September of the same year he flew
his first solo. The award was
presented by Mr. Don Ostrander,
Vice President of Planning, Bell
Aerosystems.

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�Mack and Schillo Honored
At Cap &amp; Gown's Dessert
At the annual honors dessert

newly formed Leadership Com-

mittee of the Union Activities
Board. Judi attained a 2.0 average for first semester.
Suzanne Schillo, a sophomore
majoring in English, was chosen
the most outstanding sophomore
woman. Her activities on campus include: Freshman and Varsity Cheerleading, Chairman of
Special Events for Homecoming,
Chairman of Career Planning
Conference, Chairman of Group
Leaders tor Freshman Orientation, Tour Guide, Student Guide
for the Summer Planning Conferences, and President of Sigma
Kappa Phi's pledge class. She was
awarded the Cap and Gown
Society's Sophomore iRing tor the
most outstanding freshman
woman. Sue maintains a 2.2

on April 21st, the Cap and Gown
senior women’s honor society

chose the two women in the
freshman and sophomore classes
it felt had been most outstanding
in scholarship, leadership and
service at UB.
Judi Mack, a freshman majoring in English and a 1965 National Merit Scholarship winner,
was awarded the Freshman Ring.
Judi’s activities on campus include being Publicity Chairman
of the Silver Ball, Brochure and
Program of Spring Weekend,
Commuter Chairman of the
Sophomore Sponsor
program,
Corresponding Secretary of the
International
Club, a group
leader for 1966 Freshman Orientation, and a member of the

VAI SEMPRE
CON IL
POVERO
GIOVINETTO

average.

D© Lire

IRC Finalizes Election Result
After Initial Disqualification
technicality to ensure legality.”
IRC president elect Joel FeinInan,
a 19-year-old sophomore
biology major, said, "it is the
resident students who were made
fools of. It was a pure waste of
time and effort to re-run the

Official results of the InterResidence Council (IRC) elections which were reheld April
25 are as follows: President, Joel
Feinman, 277 votes and 35 writein votes; Vice President, Alan
Fried, 264 votes and 25 write-in

election.”

votes; Secretary, Judy Snyder,
277 votes and 19 write-in votes;
and treasurer, Alan Sturtz, 246
votes and 37 write-in votes. There
were 344 votes cast in this elec-

tion.

The April 14 and 15 IRC elections had been voided by the
Student Judiciary Elections Court
April 18. The court ruled that
since the functions of the Elections Committee were not established in writing prior to the
campaign, and since impartiality
should always be maintained by
persons charged with the responsibility of the supervision of the
elections process, “the entire election is invalid and therefore null
and void

f

Reserved copies of the
1966 Buffalonian may be
picked up in Room 345

Norton, between the
hours of 9 a.m. &amp; 4 p.m.,
during the week of May
2nd. Please bring your
grey receipts and the balance of payment due on

Larry Pivnick, a presidential
candidiate in the original election, had contested the election
of Joel Feinman as President on
the grounds that he had received partisan support from Gary
Roberts, 1965-66 IRC president.
Mr. Pivnick had questioned the
entire election, charging that the
elections rules were not clear.

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Mr. Pivnick and Sharon Shulman, a candidate for secretary in
the original election, withdrew
before the election was reheld.
Mr. Roberts commented that since
the only candidates in the 2nd
election were the original winners, the re-election was “a mere

now!

yearbook.

your

The IRC Elections Committee,
under the direction of Mr. John
Derbay, has established a formal
sete of rules and procedures for
conducting elections.

We’re lining up

Mr. Feinman announced that
he plans to continue work for
more liberal curfews, including
the possible abolition of senior
women's curfews. He mentioned
that he would like to improve
relations among the IRC, the Student Senate and the House Councn s

"

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PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, May 3, 1966

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P, E CTItU M

PAGE FOUR

Editorial Comment

.

.

Cacotopia and Eutopia

.

The Sit-In
Yesterday fifteen students including graduate teaching fellows staged a dramatic act of protest in the administrative offices of this university. The issues which
provoked them are complex, but their frustration in the
face of administration chauvinism and pious “Pontius
Pilatism” was very simple.
The administration has failed in its responsibility

to protect the university from the shrill pressures of the
warfare state and to protect the principles of education
upon which a university is founded. During the morning
meeting with the GFCSS President Furnas statefl that he
did not make the decision to administer the draft test on
campus. He even said he didn’t know who had made
the decision—in fact he actually said “All I know is what
I read in the papers.” He rejected the ridiculously
reasonable proposals of the GFCSS and refused to even
discuss the matter before the academic community on
the grounds that the needs of the government for cannon
fodder superseded any responsibility the university might
have for free discussion and debate.
Sound familiar? The same chauvinistic rationalizations have fallen from the lips of such noted educators
as Franco, Goebbels, Salazar and Diaz. The administration has turned the university not only into a propaganda
arm of the present government, but into a procurement
agency for the military—and it has done so without a
whisper of protest. It has done so in fact by default
since by President Furnas’ own admission the decision
to administer the Test was made by some secretary somewhere because in fact it was taken for granted.
And now, when members of the academic community wish to discuss the role of the university in responsible
education they must resort to extreme actions even to
get a hearing. The demonstrators are running great personal risks in great part to save the university from
shameful disgrace. They must do this because the administration has failed to do so. If all Pres. Furnas
knows is “What he reads in the papers”’, then he has
no business administering an institution of higher learning.
If the university must submit without question
to the flagrant coercion of the military, then it has no
business calling itself a university. And if both of these
things are true, then there is nothing left fighting for,
in Vietnam—or anywhere.

For anyono who hat followed
the nowt for tha past weak, tha
facts and quotations used in this
column are substantially correct
except where I have obviously
belabored points. I mention this

only to that no one will
me seriously.

take

The dialogue on the War in
Vietnam continued last week.
Rep. Gerald Ford accussed the
Johnson Administration of
“shocking mismanagement of the
war,” a charge which Secretary
of Defense McNamara labeled as
“baloney.” McNamara was particularly exercised by Ford’s allegations of bomb shortages and
rejoined by commenting that the
United States had 60,000 tons
of bombs “in inventory” and

planned to accure 638,000 tons
(12.76 x 10.8 pounds) for next
year’s use. This works out to
about 47 pounds'per Vietnamese,
North and South: the Final Solution to the Vietnamese problem.

McNamara also denied that the
United States was buying surplus

JAMES CALLAN

.

bombs from our Allies. This
denial was belied later in the
week by a report that the U.S.
was buying back bombs at a
considerable markup that we had
originally sold as surplus to West
Deutschland. The Krupp Steel
Werke had customized them by
stamping "Gott Mit Uns” on the
right side as you look down and
had inserted a tape recorder
which repeated “I am not responsible 1 am not responsible This
is a recording” all the way down
into the village. McNamara also
denied that surplus bombs for
domestic use as playtoys would
be off the market long enough
to cut into next Christmas’ shopping season. “There is no toy
gap,” he explained.
McNamara continued by defending the management of the
War based on air power. So far
the bombing has equalled that
of the Korean War and surpassed that of the European
theatre of WWH. The air cover
for troop actions has been the
most comprehensive of any war

The argument was a logical

I attempted to prove two
conclusions: (1) Abortion is not
always moral; and (2) If abortion
is ever moral, then it is always
moral. Given these two statements, the final conclusion is
immediate: abortion is not ever
moral. To prove (1), I noted that
murder is a universally recogone:

agreed profoundly.” (Montage to
Anacin commercial to baseball
scores).

The overwhelming majority of
Americans continued to support
the War, a fact that McNamara
was not loath to mouth.
it can
Take heart, peaceniks
not happen here!
—

the right

.

On April 8 I wrote a column
opposing abortion and any legislation permitting abortion. This
opinion I thought to be perhaps
the least controversial of any I
proffered all year, ’’in this belief
1 was certainly mistaken, as evidenced by the rash of letters opposing the column, a pile growing so large that neither time
nor space permit individual replies. The issue has been batted
about so often now that the gist
of the original may have been
lost in translation, and so I give
you a brief summary.

in history, said McNamara and
added reassuringly, “We planned
it that way.” He had no comment as to the report that
friendly interservice rivalry had
resulted in unnecessary bombing
of insignificant targets. Off the
record he was reported to have
said, “Boys will be boys."
The mass media did its best
to prevent the dialogue from escalating into a trialogue, thus
cluttering up the voters’ minds.
On a weekly NBC news report,
Senator Clark of Pennsylvania
asked McNamara if he considered
the War to be in our national
interests. McNamara replied at
length that he thought it was.
Clark answered that he “dis-

nized evil, that there is no important difference between abortion and infanticide in a normal
case, and hence that at least
some of the time abortion is to
be regarded as immoral. To prove
(2), I began by seeing whether the
assumption that abortion is ever
moral would lead me. Noting
that that assumption implied that
the fetus is something less than
human, and remembering that
lesser beings are to be dealt with
by man as he sees fit, I concluded
that the assumption leads one
to believe that abortion is uni-

versally permissible.
Hence we see that my conclusions follow, from premises quite
unassailable (e.g., murder is
wrong) according to normal logic.
Ah, normal logic si, Steesean
logic no! Mr. Eric Steese, in his

bold attempt to dismantle normal
thought processes, asserts that
the simple contrapositive argument is old-fashioned and hence-

forth invalid. He claims that even
if (1) and (2) are true, the conclusion still does not follow. So,
for Mr. Steese’s benefit (and for
no one else’s, since I can’t conceive of anyone else being unable
to understand it) here it is
.
. Given;
spelled out
If A,
then B. Therefore: If not B, then
not A. Given: not B. Therefore:
.

.

.

.

not A.

Mr. Steese at least makes a
gallant try, and his case is no
more than amusing. Robert McCubbin, however, is something
else. In his latest letter he mutters something about the Golden

Rule and decides that abortion
“seems more a matter for the

heart than for logic.” This philosophy of heart before mind
nauseates me. Don’t bother writing another letter, Mr. McCubbin
—there’s no point in carrying on
a dialogue when one of the parties involved refuses to think.

On Student Types

By LARRY BEAUPRE

The Collegiate Press Service

THE

SPECTRUM

The official
Publication

student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May. except for exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.
Editor-in-Chief

Business

JEREMY TAYLOR

Manager

RAYMOND D. VOLPE

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff—Loretta Angeline, Joanne Bouchier, Russell Buchman. Karen Green,
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts, Rick Schwab, Dan Schroeder,
Sharon Shulman,
Eileen Teitler, Nancy Toder. Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg.

Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Staff —Bonnie Bartow. Ron Ellsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons. Barbara Loeb,
Audrey Logel, Bob Marlin, Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack. William Weinstein.
Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Staff—Mike Castro, Mike Dolan. Steve Farbman, Bob Frey. Scott Forman,
J B

Sharcot

SHARON HONIG

Layout Editor
Stephanie

Staff —Joanne Bouchier,

Parker,

Copy Editor
Staff—Carol Becker. Estelle Fox. Jocelyn
Claire Shottenfeld. Susan Zuckerberg.

Steve Silverman.

LAUREN JACOBS
Hailpern, Sandy Lippman,

Betsy Ozer,

Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
Staff—Terry Angelo. Audrey Cash, Pat Rosenfeld. Steve Silverman, Joseph
Mancini.
Photography Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Staff —Don Blank. Peter Bonneau, Joseph Feyes, Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber.
Marc Levine, Ivan Makuch, Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman.
Robert Wynne
Circulation

Manager

DIANE LEWIS

IRENE RICH

Faculty Advisor
Financial Advisor

EDITORIAL

DALLAS

GARBER

IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

POLICY

Second Class

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Buffalo. N Y.
year,
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Paid at
per

Represented
for national advertising by
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..

A Yale University study has
recently come up with a list of
"student types" and given them
scholarly names. Most would
agree that there are definite
classifications of students. Here

are mine:
The Professional Student
He changes majors just in the
nick of time to avoid graduation.
Finally, when he is forced to
graduate or slips in his planning,
he has 200 plus hours and a
background from electrical engineering to philosophy.
The Professional Finance
He
battles his books to get a job
solely so he can support the most
beautiful, wonderful girl ever. He
will marry her after graduation.
He rushes his studies during the
week so he can go home on weekends to see his girl. The extent
of his conversation with his
roommate is "My girl told me
to . . .”
The Professional Booker
He
cannot be torn from his books,
doesn’t know a single bartender’s
name, doesn’t date, is dragged
rarely to the Union movies, and
he really believes two hours of
study are needed for each class
hour. He goes to bed at 2 a.m.
and gets up at 6 a m. He is dull
but makes a 3.5 - 4.0.
The Magician
He gets the
grades, but how remains a mystery to the Booker. He possesses
a wide range of general knowledge which he calls upon frequently and confidently during
exams Where he originally came
—

—

—

—

by this general knowledge is
also a mystery. A 3-pointer, on
the nose.
The Professional Independent
Does everything he can to
make sure nobody mistakes him
for a Greek. The Professional Independent Girl, a subtype, believes studying is more important
than dating. The Professional Independent Boy, another subtype,
wears uncoordinated socks and
—

sweaters.

The Drinker
When he studies, nobody is quite sure. Where
he gets his money, nobody is
quite sure. His greatest achievement, second only to when a
bartender bought him a beer,
was the day he took an exam
drunk.
The Professional Jock
He
is never ignored by his instructors
he gets either an A or
an E because he’s an athlete,
—

—

—

although
"arrangements”
are
made to ensure the Athletic Association that he'll be here next
semester to draw more cash into

the till.
The

wishes she was a Negro so she
could personally suffer the gross
injustices the white man inflicts
upon the Negro. Likes to use
words like “honestly . .
truly
. . . really,” She is “involved.”
She will probably marry the Reformer.
The Social Climber
Definitely drinks at Kam’s so he can
be noticed. Many times associated
with an activity, but not in the
fulfilled sense that The Activity
Jock {below) is. The Social
Climber is usually inept. He
climbs and climbs but never gets
anywhere. He desperately wants
to be important. A variety of The
Social Climber is the Administrators’ Patsy who loves being re.

—

cognized by University higher-ups
in return for an occasional

—

cookie.

The Activity Jock
Life is
worth -while as long as the yearbook retains its “Who’s Who’’
section. Very similar to The
Social Climber, only he isn’t
—

quite

so inept.

The Professional Politician
Knows every political hack and
ward boss in the state, and
doesn't mind telling you so. The
Politician (a) The Liberal
Forgot one of the basic concepts
of liberals is the free competition of ideas. The Politician (b)
The Conservative
Still crying
over Brother Barry's demise.
The Has Been
Reminds himself that it’s better than being
a Never-Was. Basks in his glories
—

Reformer
With his
pocket Marx in hand, he really
believes any University where
the teacher-student ratio isn’t
1 to 1 is a “multiversity” with
all students alienated, though
they may not admit it. Desperately wishes this were Berkeley
so he could “get some work
done.” He wants to be a hero,
but finds trouble convincing anyone but his fellow 11 Reformers
that he is. Will probably marry
The Bleeding Heart
The Bleeding Heart
She
—

—

—

—

—

of

days gone by. Pity everything's gone to hell since he
ran it.

�■
-

l&gt;t

ti

•

'

Tuesday, May 3, 1966
.

**•'

SPECTRUM

MM FfVB

Guggenheim Fellowships Awarded NationalSorority
To Profs. Federman and Myrow Celebrates Its
25th Anniversary
Associate

French

Professor

Raymond Federman and Frederick Myrow, Creative Associates

in Music, have been awarded
1966-67 Guggenheim Fellowships

Marketing Series
Dr. Seymour Banks, a VicePresident of Leo Burnett Company, will conduct the final session of the Marketing Colloquium Series today.
The purpose of the

series is

to familiarize faculty and stu-

dents with research activities
and current trends in the field
of marketing.
A seminar for

graduate stu-

dents will be held at 11 a.m, in
Norton, followed by a coffee
hour at 3 p.m. in the Faculty
Club. A seminar for faculty and
students will take place at 3:30
p.m. in Norton.
Anyone interested in attending
should contact Dr. Alan Andreason, extension 4512.

by the Simon Guggenheim Foundation.
The fellowships are awarded
annually to scholars in several
academic fields. This year 321
of the 2,000 applicants were honored.
Dr, Federman received the fellowship tor his work in French
literature. He mentioned that he
is writing a book entitled New
Trends in Contemporary French
Poetry to be completed in Paris
this fall.
“I am delighted and honored,"
Dr. Federman commented, “because there was strict competi-

National Chi Omega Sorority
celebrated its 25th anniversary
on the UB campus with an Anniversary Luncheon April 2 and
a reception April 3.

Active members and alumni
attended the luncheon honoring
National President Elizabeth Dyer. Miss Dyer, National Panhellenic Council President, has been
president of the sorority since
1952.

previously taught at the University of California at Santa Bar-

Chancellor Clifford Furnas accepted a sculpture presented by
Chi Omega for the University at
the reception. The sculpture, entitled “Spring”, was created by
Larry Griffis.

comment.

Knapp said, “The piece of
sculpture was given to express
the Chapter’s apreciation for the
friendly and cooperative attitude
shown by the administration during the past 25 years,”

tion.”

Born in France, Dr. Federman

bara. He has been at UB since
1964 and is the author of Journey
to Chaos, a study of Samuel
Beckett.
Mr. Myrow, presently in California, could not be reached for

UB Chi Omega President Imo-

ge.ie

Final Orchestra Concert Slated for Thursday
The UB Orchestra will present
its final concert of the 1965-66

season on Thursday at 8:30 p.m.

in Baird Hall. Pamela Gearhart
will conduct the 64 piece orchestra in a program of works by
Stravinsky, Bach, Walton, Hindemith, Liadoff, Ravel and Wagner.

Martha Alfee, oboe, will be the
soloist in Fantasia on “Nun komm
der Seiden Heiland” by Bach; and
Patricia Oreskovic will be the
reader in “Excerpts from Facade”
by Walton, “An entertainment
with poems by Edith Sitwell.”
Accompanying her will be instru-

Greek Education Philosophy
And Reforms to Be Reviewed
Dr. Evangelos P. Papanoutsos,
a vice-president of the Athens
Technological Institute in Athens,

Greece, will review “The Recent
Educational Reforms of Greece
and its Philosophy” today at 2:15
p.m. in Norton 233.

Dr. Papanoutsos, an advisor to
Greece Prime Minister George
Papandreous, initiated several
major changes in an educational
reform program in Greece during
1964-65, according to Philosophy
Professor John Peter Anton.
Dr. Papanoutsos is the former

general director and secretarygeneral of the Greek Ministry of
Education. He has taught at the
School of Advanced Free Studies
in Athens since 1946 and received a doctor of laws honoris
causa degree from St. Andrew's
University in Scotland in 1965.

Several books concerning the
philosophy of education have
been written by Dr. Papanoutsos,

The lecture is sponsored by the
School of Education &amp; Philosophy
Department.

Dance Club to Hold Festival
The Modern Dance Club and
the Modern Dance Workshop
will present a Dance Film Festival on May 4, 1966 in the Conference Theatre, at 3:00 p.m.
Among the films to be presented
is the much acclaimed classic by
Martha Graham, Lamentation.
The modern dance work of Volerie Betti will be of particular
interest.
Dances and Rhythms from the

Carribbean will provide an exciting contrast in Carnival of Rhythm. The most daring of the
shorts to be shown is Dance Chromatics which will present and
utilize new experimental forms.
This years film festival has
varied its scope of presentation
in hopes of pleasing as wide a
variety of people as possible. All
interested are urged to attend;
admission is free.

mentalists Mary Adelman, Kathy
Anner, James Patterson, Alois
Hafner, Donald Montalto, Madalena Marx, Bruce Cramer, and
James Santella. Andrew Jennings
is the Concertmaster of the orchestra.

A Memorial Symposium

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Honors the Deceased
Pharmacy Chairman
A memorial symposium in
honor of the late Dr. Eino Nelson, former chairman of the Department of Pharmaceutics, was
held April 26 at the 1966 Annual
meeting of the American Pharmaceutical Association (A.Ph.A.)
in Dallas, Texas.
Dr. Daniel H. Murray, dean of
the School of Pharmacy, delivered the memorial address. Dr.
Gerhard Levy, present chairman
of the Department of Pharmaceutics, discussed “Correlation of
Gastrointestinal Absorption and
‘In Vitro’ Dissolution Kinetics of
Drugs contained in Oral Solid
Dosage Forms.”
Six other members of the Pharmacy faculty participated in the
regular program of the A.Ph.A.
throughout the week-long convenof Medicinal
tion: Professor
Chemistry Thomas J. Bados, Associate Professor of Pharmaceutics David E. Guttman, Professor
of Pharmacy Laurence D. Lockie,
Professor and Chairman of the
Department of Medicinal Chemistry Dr. Howard J. Schaeffer,
Associate Professor of Pharmaceutics Michael A. Schwartz.

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MR.BIG

Directors of 'Magic Flute Announce
Casting for Three Performances
Heinz Rehfuss,

Artistic Direc-

tor, and Muriel Wolf, General
Manager, announced today the
cast for performances of Mozart’s The Magic Flute which will
be presented in three performances by the UB Music Department on May 8, 14, and 15 at
the Studio Theatre School at Lafayette and Hoyt Avenues.
Carol Plantamura, a UB Creative Associate and Janice Epke,
a local voice teacher, will alternate as Pamina with Warren Hoffer of the State University College faculty as Tamino. Sylvia
Brigham-Dimiziani, another of the
UB Creative Associates, will sing
the arias of Queen of the Night.
Laurence Bogue, UB Voice faculty, and Mary Blake of Ravenna,

Ohio, will perform the comic
Papageno-Papagena team. The
High Priest Sarastro will be performed by UB choral director
Robert Beckwith; Gary Burgess
of Niagara Falls will sing Monas-

tatos. The three

ladies

will be

Jan Valerio of Hamburg, Dorothy

Hedden of Buffalo; and Mary Ran
kin of East Aurora. While the
three Genii of the opera will be
performed by UB students Pamela Dadey of Buffalo, Susan Yeager of Kenmore, and Marcia Giambrone of Cheektowaga. Sanford Leff will appear in three
roles as Sprecher, Man in Armor,
and Priest. Three Slaves will be
Peter Madison, John Slattery, and
Larry Sugdin and Six Animals
will be played by Carol Bilecki,
Susan Pritchard, Rosemary Day-

ton, John Brosnin, Diane Ward
and John Slattery.
The production is staged by
Director of
Richard S.
the N. Y, After Dinner Opera

Company. Carlo Pinto is Musical
Henry A VVickc is
Tecnical Director, assisted by
Marilyn Steffanetti as Stage Man
Director.

has designed scenery and costumes with

ager.

Boris

Baranovic

lighting by Thomas S. Watson.
Tickets for the three performances are available at Baird Hall
and Norton Hall Box Offices at
the University. No telephone res-

ervations will be made, but mail
orders will be filled in the order
they are received. Ticket scale
is $2.50 general admission, $1.50
faculty and staff, and $.50 students.

And then 9

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It fizzes! It roars! It bubbles with

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Whisperings. "Who's that strangely
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ebullient character of Sprite has set you apart
somebody,
uh, »hoever-you-are\
uh.
You’re

TINGLING. WE JUST CC

�PACE SIX

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, May 3, 1966

.11

'ed
&gt;n
la

�Tuesday, May 3, 1966

SPECTRUM

UB Music Department Plans
Yearly Band Lawn Concert
The SUNYAB Department of

Music announces plans for the
I, annual Band Lawn Concert to be
'held on Sunday, May 8 at 3 p.m.

on the campus of the university.
Under the direction of Frank
J. Cipolla and Richard W. Rodean, the combined University
Bands of 130 students will present a “pops” concert featuring
traditional and contemporary music suitable for an open air band

concert. Selections will include

such works as von Suppe’s Light
Cavalry Overture, Johann Strauss'
Emperor Valse, Percy Grainger’s
Irish Tune From County Derby,

Arthur Sullivan’s Pineapple Poll
standard marches, show
tunes and popular band high-

and

lights.

The annual “Lawn Concert” has
established itself as one of the
fine traditions associated with
the University Band activities on
this campus. Bringing to life the
nostalgic! heritage of "Park Band”
music to those who can still recall the days of afternoon band
concerts, the University Bands
present this program for all students and residents in the Buffalo area on the lawn of the Main
Street Campus Free of Charge.

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

APARTMENTS

55cc. Yamaha, excellent condition, girl owner, few miles.
Call LH 2-2002.

3 Bedroom Apt. For summer,
furnished. Cheap. One block
from campus on Bailey. Call
836-7763.

'6S

'61 Plymouth Savoy, white, 6 cyl.,
standard, low mileage, radio,
good tires. $300. 832-4730 after
5 p.m.
'54 Plymouth Belvedere 2-Door
Hardtop, 6 cyl., standard shift,
low mileage, easy on gas. Call

Rich, NX 2-0256.

250 cc. Street or competi-

B.S.A.
tion
teed.
Gene,

prepared. Engine guaranClean. Reasonable. Call
634-1495 after 6 p.m.

Must

Sell

Entire

Collection of

Books, literary classics, philosophy, poetry, etc. Call 876-3174.
'63 Vespa Motor Scooter, 125 cc.

excellent condition. Low mile831-4112.

age. Call Kurt Merkel

'58 Buick $175 must be seen to be
appreciated. Phone TF 6-3865.
Ask for Ted,
2 Wristwatches

Not hot! Gruen, Wittnauer—17 jewels, 10
K. G. plating, etc. Very reasonable. Myron, TR 6-7473.
—

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
Girls interested in a summer
waitressing position in the Catskill Mt. area. Contact Joanne,
837-5184 or Mary &amp; Pat 831-2889.
LOST
Green Wool Slicker style coat at
the TKE Beer Blast. Reward.
Call Linda TR 3-5484.

Black Wallet lost at the TKE
Beer Blast Friday, April 22.
Call Allan Levitt 895-8843.
UB '65 Class Ring, silver polished

black onyx, initials RLM. April
25, Hayes Hall. Reward. Call

874-0525.

Glasses, reddish brown frames, in

Rathskeller, Wednesday evening, April 20. If found call Carl

Riggie, 835-5045.

Would the
Wollensak
Baird Hall

a
Tape Recorder from
Thursday, April 21,
Please leave it at Norton Candy
Counter. No questions asked.
Robert Little, 831-3907.
person who took

G'iTs Beige Wallet.

Please re-

turn. No questions asked. Regard. Call Wendy 831-4178.
OPPORTUNITIES
Golf

Randy Fox, pro
Lessons
—individual, group rates, Ni—

agara Sports Center, range and
"’i mature golf
Athol Springs
Circle, Rt, 75, Hamburg. Phone

2 Bedroom Apt.

For summer
Princeton Courts, furnished. 5
minute walk from campus. Call
837-4879 nights.

PACE SEVEN

Newman Club Presents
Panel of Refugees
From Castro's Cuba
A panel discussion on Cuba's
reaction to Castro will be held
by
the Newman
Apostolate
tomorrow at 8:30 in 147 Diefendorf.

The panel is representative of
Cubans who were once loyal to
Castro but fled Cuba after finding their faith misplaced, according to Newman Club President Ginny Keebler.

Gould Approves Institute
To Aid Local Enterprises
The Man-Machine Design Sys-

tems Institute, proposed by the
Department of Industrial En-

gineering, has received final approval from State University
President Samuel B. Gould, an-

nounced Richard D. Ford of the
Industrial Engineering Department.

The purpose of the Institute is
to enrich the educational experience of students, faculty and

Weekly Calendar

The panel will consist of Rev.
Peter Masdevall, a Piarist father

presently engaged as a Spanish
instructor at Rosary Hill College
and former teacher in Havana.
Cuba; Juan Clemente Zamora,
lawyer, diplomat and UB Spanish
instructor, formerly with the
Castro Government Ministeries
of Education and Foreign Affairs; Jose A. Bufil, lawyer,
educator, Spanish instructor at
Niagara University and former
Catholic University of Havana
professor; Antonio Perez, currently in public relations, for
mer secretary of the Cuban
Banknig Union.
An open discussion will follow
the program.

practicing engineers and to solve
real problems of local business,
industry and government, according to Professor of Industrial
Engineering Wayland P. Smith.
The Institute will mesh industrial engineering research and
development with the actual
problems in Western New York,
he added.
A project team engaged in a
study of factory renewal in

MAY 3-9
TUESDAY

Discussion: The University and
Its Colleges, Discussion of the
Ten Year Plan, 10:00 p.m.
Lecture: Dr. Philip Ross of the
Univ. of Pittsburgh, on public
policy on labor relations, 234
Norton, 2:00 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Address: Marking of the 100th
Anniversary of the University
by Dr. Capen from the Acadomic Convocation of Oct. 3, 1946
in the quadrangle facing Cros-

by Hall.
Film: “Lamentation," “Dance
Chromatics,” “Carnival of
Rhythm,” and “Desperate
Heart," sponsored by the Modern Dance Club.
Senate Meeting; Norton Cafeteria, 7:00 p.m.

THURSDAY
Dialogue: J. Z. Friedman and
J. E. Deane on The University
in Transition, changes in attitudes since merger with the
SUNY, 10:00 p.m.
Lecture; Eucharist, 229 Crosby,
2:00 p.m. by Sever Trifu.

Room or Share an Apt. For summer. Near campus. Call Jim

831-3666.

Apt. 1 Room, furnished, Oxford
Ave. Available after May 20th,
Call Mr. Nacher TR 7-1626 after
6 p.m.
Summer Sublet, 3Vz room apt,,
Princeton Courts, very well

furnished. 3 minute walk from
837-7684.

campus.

3 Room Apt. Available June 1.
University Ave., 10 minute
walk. Call Barry Bienstock, after
6 p.m., 834-7144.
3 Room Apt., for months of June,
July, August, Fully furnished,
2 blocks from campus in Prince-

ton Courts, Rent reasonable. Call
837-6928 between 5-6 p.m.
Summer Sublet. Two male room-

mates, furnished, luxury apt.
2 blocks from campus. Call im
mediately, 837-9027.
Massachusetts Seacoast, 3 bed
room house on ocean front, gas
heat, available weekly in June.
Phone NF 4-3082.
Apt., UB Area,

available June 1.

Completely furnished, 2 bedroom duplex, new kitchen. Call

837-7258.

2 Bedroom

Furnished Apt. near

campus to sublet June 1 to
Sept. 1. $95 month including utilities. Call 833-6416 after 5 p.m. or
weekends.
Female Roommates wanted for
summer, option to continue
'6667. Just opposite campus, modApt. 837-4610.
6 Room Apt. June, July, August,
137 Lisbon Ave., 3 blocks from
campus. Completely furnished.
2 3 students. $40 each/month.
Call 837-7735 after 6 p.m.
•

Live-In Mother's Helper for summer, Private room, TV. Two

children. Good salary. 634-4298
after 4 p.m.
Sub-Letting an Apt. for this sum
mer. 2\i blocks from campus
Room for four. Rent inexpensive,

831-3952.

Free Room and Board. Help with
two children. 10 minute walk.
Call TF 6-4333.

—

dents. $45 each per month includes all utilities. TR 7-0112.

PERSONAL

fun for

all ages at NIAGARA

SPORTSCENTER

8°lf-

game

[Pg d range.
“‘

v

,

—

Completely Furnished Apt. avail
able for summer in Sheridan
Parkside. Suitable for three stu-

Miniature

room arcade, golf driv-

1701 Niagara Falls

Tonawanda, N. Y.

SERVICES
Spanish Teaching
(English-Spanish)
Call 836-4425.

—

Translations
Reasonable.

Anything

goes when you wear

"IT'S CRICKET

Men’s Toiletries. Try it and see. (Girls, give it a
After shave, 4 oz., $3.50. Cologne, 4 oz., $4.50.

hnd

1

825-9812.

drug stores

and cosmetic departments of department store
prodi

�A 3SA*

■»

T 3 3 ■?

:

Alpha Sig Wins Olympiad
Gamma Phi Fraternity sponsored its Seventh Annual Greek
Olympiad at Rotary Field April

24.

Alpha Sig won the Olympiad
with 35 points, followed by Sig
Ep, 34; AEPi, 13; APO, 12; TKE,
11; and GDI, 8. Alpha Gamma
Delta beat Chi Omega 49-45 in
the sorority division.

The last event, the egg toss,
was troubled by cold weather,
reported David Clark of Gamma
Phi. “By the time it was started,
the participants were using fro-

zen eggs, .a (actor which enabled
them to throw the eggs 30-40
yards without fearing breakage.”

Byron Caldwell of Gamma Phi
presented awards to the victors
of the Olympiad April 27. Permanent trophies were given to
Alpha Sig and Alpha Gam. The
overall trophy was given to Alpha Sig for the third year in a
row, enabling them to retire it.
A special “candy” award was presented to TKE “for their especially conspicuous lack of effort in
their tug-o-war with Alpha Sig,”
noted Mr. Clarke.

PAISANO’S
Gotta Deal!
order CARNE MACINATA for a buck

837-6120
and we'll give you SPAGHETTI FREE!
FAST FREE DELIVERY

—

Tuesday, May 3, 1966

'

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Scientists Discern
Breathing Secret
While Submerged
UB physiologists have defined
and measured the specific requirements needed for artificial
gills enabling submerged men or
animals to draw an oxygen supply from the surrounding water.

Dr. Charles V. Paganelli announced that he and two colleagues “looked at the problem
from a respiratory viewpoint, and
are now able to tell the engineers
what precisely would be needed
in a chamber for a man in terms
of size, diffusion of oxygen and
flow of water.”
Working with Dr. Paganelli
were Dr. Hermann Rahn, professor and chairman of the UB Physiology Department, and Oxford
University medical student Nigel

Bateman.
The experiment involved placing a frog in a plexiglass chamber composed of filter paper
(Millipore Filter). The chamber
was submerged, allowing the oxygen in the water but not the water to penetrate into the chamber.
Dr, Paganelli explained that
the chamber acted as an artificial
gill, allowing the frog to breathe.

Feiffer Claims Radical-Middle
Is Group Condemned to Peace
By KATHY CENTER

“In the Age of the Radical
Middle,” said cartoonist Jules
Feiffer in a lecture last Wednesday, “there exist two unofficial national mottos: ‘All men
are equally corrupt’ and ‘Don’t
make waves.’ One defines our
condition and the other outlines
a program of living with it.”
Mr. Feiffer described the radical middle man as the man condemned to peace. He explained
that war, which previously lent
him a sense of prpose and depression leading to a sense of
reform, no longer exists as a
possible solution.

He continued, “Withdraw! and
alienation are the answers to
the radical middle man to his
environment. Even if he can’t
control the system, he can control himself.”

JULES FEIFFER
Photo by Alan

Gruber

A student asked the humorist
what hope he has for our society.
Mr. Feiffer said that he places
hope in a “new generation looking for an answer outside the

Serving the system are satire
and social criticism which act
as an outlet, a way to “let go,”
explained Mr. Feiffer.

established order.”

FAST FREE DELIVERY

Here are 7 knotty problems
facing the Air Force:
can you help us solve one?

£(b*l?u4-paC
t

6. Space propulsion. As our
space flights cover greater
and greater distances, propulsion-more the
thing else-WTITBeT
limiting factor. N&lt;
and new propulsi
niques must be four

an assortment of fine, nationally-advertised
products —courtesy of famous manufacturers.
...

You will receive such product s as theser

29°

Macleans Tooth Paste
Alka-Seltzer
Absorbine, Jr.
Old Spice Lime After Shave Lotion
2-Blade Pac Super Stainless Gillette
-

Halo Shampoo
The University Bookstore will contribute 15c of your donation to the Capen
Fund.

scientist on his first
merit who mokes

breakthrough!

1. Repairs in space. If something goes
wrong with a vehicle in orbit, how can it
be fixed? Answers must be found, if largi
scale space operations are to become c
reality. For this and other assignments A
Force scientists and engineers will be
colled on to answer in the next few years,
we need the best brains available.

7. Pilot perfon
Important tests mu;
made fo determine
pilots of manne'
spacecraft will
long periods owi

the earth. Of

2. Lunar landing. The
exact composition of
the lunor surface, os
well os structural
and propulsion char'
octet istics of the space

Ai
Force officer br
involved
comes
in research and develop
ment right away. But where the most e:
citing advances ore
taking place, young
Air Force scientists,
administrate
pilots, and engineei
are on the see

vehicle,

4. Space orientation. The orbital problems of a spacecraft, including its ability
to maneuver over selected points on the
to the mi

f&gt;

ice.

if

1

ossigi

young

T
Air

plenty

Force phy:

•&gt;

Want to find out how you fit into tl
Air Force picture? Contact your neare
Air Force representative, or mail the ce

enter into

this problem. Important study remains to
be done—and, os an Air Force officer,
you could be the one to do it!

3. Life-support biology. The filling of
metabolic needs over very extended peri
ods of time in space is one of the most
fascinating subjects that
Air Force scientists are in- •
vesfigating. The results
promise to have vital ramifications for our life on
earth, as well as in outer
space

coi

not every new

r

Brylcreem

are to keep on e;
the mysteries of spe
if may well be an Ai

pon today.

!

S

UNITED STATES AIR FORCE
Bo* A. Dept SCR 64

&gt;h AFB. Te»ai 78148

J

Nome.

|

College

'•0&gt;«

5. Synergeticplane changing. The abil
ity of a spacecraft to change altitude can | Addre
also be crucial to space operations. Where ! C.iy_
but in the Air Force could Sc.B.'s get the *
chance to work on such fascinating proj- u RART
ecfs right at the start of their careers?
America s

pf.nil

Class ol

ip Code

u_
aerospace team

�Tuesday,

Promising Play
Opens Tonight
At Glen Park
By T. J. FEIN

Work at the Crossroads” (or “Tempted, Tried and
True”) opens tonight at the Glen
Park Playhouse in Williamsville.
The play is promising. It is an
1890’s melodrama complete with
rave-bashful hero, true-as-she-istender heroine and of course, a
world-wicked villain.
The theatre troupe is composed
of local amateurs who are able
to ham it up to their hearts content. Fortunately this is the type
of play in which it is necessary
“Dirty

PACK MINI

S P ECTIUM

to overact.

Heroine Nellie Lovelace is
tempted by evil Munro Murgatroyd to run away from mild Mill
River to the evil big city (Buffalo,
perhaps?). Nellie is unable to
make her big decision, for to
leave would surely break the
heart of her mother, the Widow
Lovelace. At the end of this suspense-filled drama the villain is
forced to admit that he is “foiled
again” and exits amidst the hisses and boos of the audience.
Producer Carl Busch explains
that the production of this play
is an experiment. His idea is to
give local talent an opportunity
to appear on stage. He is especially interested in encouraging
university students to participate
in production and presentation.
He feels that this would be an
excellent means for a student to
gain exposure and experience on
stage (and besides they would be
willing to work for less).
The play is presented on a
cabaret stage designed to allow
the audience to relax with food
and drink while watching the
action on stage.
We wish Mr. Busch and company luck in his endeavor and
hope that he can find enough
good local talent to make his
project worthwhile.

Call Board
Modern Dance Workshop meets
Monday and Thursday at 7 p.m.
in Clark Gym. Modem Dance
Club meets Tuesday afternoon at
3 p.m.

nesday, May 4 at 7:30 p.m. in
Norton 234. Drs. Artsy, Danese
and Parker will speak on “The
New Math Curriculum.”

Language Table* normally held
on Tuesdays will NOT be held
on Tuesday May 3. As a farewell
dinner, all languages (Spanish,

French, German,. Russian, Italian) will have language tables on
Wednesday May 4 at 5:30 p.m. in
Tower Dining Hall.

The

Anthropology Club will

Dr. Harold Driver of Indiana University speaking on: “A
Short History of Cross-Cultural
Methods” on Wednesday, May 4
at 8:30 p.m. in Norton 231.

present

The Math Club will hold its
last meeting of the year on Wed-

ALASKA
Anchorage: McKinley Jewelers
Fairbanks: Ralph W. Perdue. Jeweler

NEW YORK
Ithaca: Schooley's Inc.
L. Gross 4 Bro.
Jamestown; Baldwin Jewelry
Medina: Limine's Jewelry Store
Middletown: Serpentini Jewelers
Newburgh: Wm. H. Griffin Jeweler
New York City: Lewis 4 Son Inc.
Olean: Lucie's Jewelers
Oneonta: R. E. Brigham Inc.
Oneonta: Jerry Halbert Jeweler
Painted Post: Mallison Jewelers
Plattsburgh: Light's Jewelers—
Plattsburgh Plaia
Poughkeepsie: Wallace's
Rochester: Hershberg’s Jewelers
Rochester: IVm. 5. Thorne, Jeweler
Rotterdam: Gem Jewelry—Shoporama
Schenectady: Meurice B. G Hubert 4 Sons

Jamaica: Harry

Branford: Martin Bohan Jeweler

Bridgeport: Lenot Jewelers
Danbury: Addessi Jewelers—t Stores

Hamden: Fowler Jewelers lnc.~t Stores
Hartford: The Philip H. Stereos Co.
Middletown; Mahore's Jewelers
New Britain: Wsrren Jewelers
North Branford: Martin Bohan Jeweler
Stamford: Zanlow-Ferguson, Inc.
Thompsonville-Enfield: Mareh Jewelers
Waterbury: Cardella Jewelers
West Hartford: The Phillip H. Stereos Co.
Winsted: Ft G Richards

Schenectady; Wellece's
Syracuse; Henrys Quality Jewelers
Syracuse: H. J. Howe, Inc.
Town of Tonawanda; Adam, Meldrum 4

DELAWARE
Milford: H. S. Saunders, Jewelers
Newark; J. J. Minster &amp; Son
Wilmington: The Jewel Bor

Anderson Co.

Utica; Evens 4 Son
Warwick; Serpentini Jewelers
Quelily Jewelers
Henrys
Watertown:

MAINE
Caribou: Johnston's Jewelers
Lewiston; Henry Nolin
Lincoln; Sprout t Vose Jewelers
Portland; Springer's Jewelers

Waverly: S. J. Bell Jewelers
West Seneca: Adem, Meldrum 4
Anderson Co.

MARYLAND

OHIO

Annapolis: Tilghman Company

Baltimore: James R. Armiger Co.
Baltimore: A. H. Felting Co.
Chevy Chase; R. Harris and Company
Easton: Wyatt's Jewelers
Elkton: J. J. Minster &amp; Son
Frederick: Colonial Jewelry Co.
Hyattsville: Fleisher's Jlrs. t Silrersmiths

Youngstown: Reymond Brenner, Jeweler

D

I

A

M

O

N

RINGS

D

of Maryland

Rockville; Fleisher's Jhs. t Silrersmiths
of Maryland
Towson: A. H. Felling Co.
Wheaton: Winthrop Jewelers

MASSACHUSETTS
Attleboro; Pearson's Jewelry
Bedford: Bedford Jlrs. Inc:
The GreatRoad Shopping Center
Beverly; Le Bel Jewelers, Inc.
Boston; Kettell, Blake &amp; Read
Cohasset: Austin L Ahearn, Inc.
Tedeschi's Shopping Plata
Fitchburg: S. M. Nathan Inc.
Holyoke: Leo J. Simard Inc.
Lexington: Anderson's Jhs.—Silversmiths
Lowell; Wood-Abbott Co.
Lynn: Bisselt Jewelers
New Bedford: La France Jewelers
North Adams: Frank Di Lego Jewelers
Pittsfield: Pharmers Jewelers
Springfield; Landen-True. Inc.
Stoughton: Wyman Jewelers
Webster: Vets Jewelers &amp; Silversmiths
Wellesley: Anderson's Jlrs—Silversmiths
Westfield; Fe/ix Marek Jewelers
Winchester: Anderson's Jlrs.-Silversmiths

A-~

,'»‘C

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Exeter: Lopardo Jewelers
NEW JERSEY
■ASbory Pa?S CBuMvdt Jewelers
Bloomfield: Corbo Jewelers
Burlington; Silpatb's Jewelers
Clifton; Corbo Jewelers
Styerlowne Shopping Pina
Florence: G. &amp; H. Jewelers
Hackensack: Marcus Jewelers
Newark: Kroupa Jewelers
Princeton: Lavake Jewelers
Red Bank: Reussilles'
Ridgewood: Marcus Jewelers
Rutherford: Marcus Jewelers
Trenton: Hamilton Jewelers
Wayne; Cotbo Jewelers
Westfield: Marcus Jewelers
West New York: L J. Rad Jewelers

When you can't
afford to be dull.
sharpen your wits
with NoDoz
tm

NODOZ Keep Alert Tablets fight off
the hazy, lazy feelings of mental
sluggishness. NODOZ helps restore
your natural mental vitality... helps
quicken physical reactions. You become more naturally alert to people
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NODOZ is as safe as coffee. Anytime
.when you can't afford to be dull
sharpen your wits with NODOZ.

■

SAFE AS COFFEE

Caps and gowns will
be distributed in the Norton Card Room, basement
floor: May 25-27,'8:30-5
p.m. and Saturday, May
28, 10-2 p.m.

Royerslord: Zenker Jewelers

Scranton; Ang Ciccotll's Jewel Cese

Scranton: frank McDonnell Jewelers
Sharon: Wengler's
Tamaqua: Souther's Jewelry Store
Jewelry Store
Nelson's
Titusville:
Uniontown: Wallace Miller i Bro. Jits.
Warren: Darling Jewelers
Washington: S. A. Meyer Jewelers
West Reading: H. £. Messner Jeweler
Williamsport: J. S. Pudnitiki, Inc.
York: Fulet Bros.
RHODE ISLAND
Bristol: Caron's Jewelers
Greenwich:
La
Plante's Jewelers
East
Garden City; Trlden-Tlwrber Corp.
Newport:

NEW YORK
Albany: frank Adams
Albany: Fuhrman's Inc.

Corp.

VERMONT

Stuyresant Plaza
Amherst: Adam. Meldrum A Anderson Co.
Bay Shore. U.: Jenard Jewelers
South Shore Mall
Binghamton: Henrys Quality Jewelers
Boonville: Freeman's Jewelry
Brewster: Addessi Jewelers
Umrersity.
Buffalo :A.M. 4 A's-Downlown,
Sheridan, Thruway 4 Southgate Plaias
Inc
s
:
.
Jlrs
Catskill Hallenbeck
Cheektowaga: Adam. Meldrum A Anderson
Co.
.
Cohoes: Timpane s Jewelers
Corning: Bong s Jewelers
Cortland: Harry Alpetl Jeweler
Endicott: Henrys Quality
Glens Falls: Robert s Jewelry Shop
Hempstead: Harry L. Cross A Bro
Horseheads . Wade's Jewelry
Huntington, LX: Cato! Jewelers
Walt Whitman Plaia
SOLO

Tilden-Thurber

Providence: Tilden-Thurber Corp.
West Warwick: Lord's Jewelers

Albany; Stuyresant Jewelers,

,

PENNSYLVANIA
Allentown: Appel Jeweler, Inc.
Altoona: W. F. Sellers 4 Co.
Bangor: Steckel's Jewelry
Bethlehem: Finkelslein Jewelers-I Stores
Bloomsburg: Sneidmen's Jewelry
Boyertown: Howard B. Schenely
Butler: Milo Williams, Jewelers
Chester: Morris Jewelers
Coatesville: Leon's Jewelry
Collegeville: A. W. Zimmerman Jeweler
Conshohocken: Wallace Jewelers
Coraopolls: Eger's Jewelers
Easton: Lord's Jewelers
Elizabethtown: LeMar Jewelers
Erie: Darling Jewelers
Gettysburg: Coffman Jewelers
Greenville: Milo R. Williams—Jewelers
Hamburg: Merrill Alexander, Jeweler
Hanover: Columbia Jewelry Co.
Hazleton: Fellin's Jewelry
Honesdale: Butler Bros.
Indiana: Luxemberg's Jewelry
Johnstown: Law's Jewelry
Lancaster: Bash Jewelers
Lansdale: Koehler's JewelersDiamond Merchants
Lebanon: Bash Jewelers
New Castle: Fletcher Jewelry
Norristown; J. Ralph Shuler
Northampton: Foster Jewelers
Norwood: Robert H. Atkinson Jewelers
Palmyra: J. B. Bowman-Jeweler
Philadelphia: U Kalnins-Huntingdon Valley
Pittsburgh: John M. Roberts 4 Son—3Stores
Pottstown: WiUauer Jewelers
Quakertown: H. C. Kulp

CONTESSA

•

FROM *150

VIRGINIA
Alexandria: Winlhrop Jewelers
Winlhrop
Jewelers
Falls Church:
WASHINGTON. O.C.
Washington: Farr's Jewelers
Washington: R. Harris and CompanyDowntown Georgetown t Chary Chase
Washington: Chas. Schwarh i Son

,

BY

FINE

Bennington: Alhins t Gould Inc.
Burlington: F. J. Prtslon i Son Inc.
Rutland: F. B. Howard Co. Inc,

WEST VIRGINIA
Wheeling: Rosins Jewelers

PUERTO RICO
San Juan: Pascual. Inc.-tSO Oua Sl/eel

J

EWELERS

THROUGHOUT

AMERICA

�Tuesday, May 3, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

ILSIWai

S*mLS«!2

“WHO IS HARPER?”
The film called Harper (currently at the Center
Theater downtown) is a detective story, as the critics
have said, and it is a good one. But, the general contention that it is a contemporary version of the hardboiled
private-eye archetype which Bogart developed and
played to perfection is misleading. Paul Newman, in
his best performance since The Hustler, plays Lew Harper
with more than a casual nod to the mystique of the ’30’s
code-hero operating slightly outside the normal channels
of a “rational” society. However, the film is defined by a
distinctly modern sensibility which operates with varying
effectiveness on three separate but organically related
levels of action.
First, Harper has like his historical predecesors (Sam
Spade, for intsance), an instinctual determination to
clean up the mess he is involved in. But, he is operating

The progressive go for slacks by Austin-Hill Ltd. Casual. Cosmopolitan. In a glen
plaid of Dacron polyester and cotton from Galey and Lord, a Division of Burlington
Industries. For your nearest retailer, write us at 1407 Broadway. New York 18.

Seconldy, Harper, his lawyer-friend, and the people
he is pursuing, are all part of an arcane sub-culture in
the grinding sprawl of life in California. None of them
are anything like the “family next door.” One of the
movie’s strengths is that they all have a certain verisimilitude about them, and the entire film carries the chilling
suggestion that these blighted people are actually the
majority species. This idea seems to derive directly from
the modern French gangster film, most particularly the
work of men like Jean-Pierre Melville and Jacque Becker
who practically re-invented the genre. Again, the film
is not as successful as Melville’s magnificent Le Doulos
because there is no single dominant tone behind the
action. Harper himself provides a certain constant, but
the bizarre characters he meets do not have that secret
understanding or special relationship that characterizes
the entire breed in Le Doulos.

The third aspect of the film’s mode of communication is probably the strongest part of the production.
The screen-play by William Goldman (who wrote Temple
of Gold, and Boys and Girls Together) is obviously pattered after William Faulkner’s adaptation for Bogart’s
To Have and Have Not. It is terse, witty and extraordinarily functional. The minor characters don't get
more than a few good lines, but they are immediately
discernible as people
reeognizeable if unconventional.

*

\

V

j

SOB!
SHAVING EVERY
DAY IS SUCH A
UGH -DRAG!
WHAT CAN SAVE
MY TENDER,

It.

-

Smight doesn’t really know how to blend them into the
main current of the film. I think this is due primarily
to Smight’s inability to arrive at any central, conception.
Smight’s unsteady hand blurs the cinematography
too, unfortunately, and contributes very little to the
acting. But most of the people in the cast are competent

professionals who make the most of their lines. Robert
Wagner is especially good as a seemingly shallow prettyboy whose own story, once uncovered, is a sinister
example of personal morality vanishing in a wave of
anomie. Shelley Winters has a hilarious vignette as a
bloated ex-glamor girl and Janel Leigh is surprisingly
apppealing as Harper's almost ex-wife.

I would say that the fine screen play and Newman’s

good performance make up for the deficiencies, so that
that movie is fun to watch in spite of all its obvious
faults. And after all. that’s why we go to the movies,

isn't it?

?

For fun. I mean?

Pass-Fail System
(ACP) —At

the University of
Berkeley, an undergraduate with a grade point average higher than B is eligible
to take one course per semester"
outside his major field, for which
he receives credit but no grade

California.

The idea behind this kind of
pass-fail course is that students
who ordinarily would not take

an extremely challenging course
for fear of sacrificing grade
points would be allowed to do
so without risk of lowering their
averages.
New draft procedures are mak

grades increasingly importmagnifying all the drawbacks of the grading system, the
ing

ant,

Western Herald, Western Michigan University, said in an editorial. Students will soon lake only
courses in which they know they
can do well, thereby narrowing
and limiting their educational ex-

periences.

The Herald continued: In order
to encourage the broadening of
education, we feel that a system
such as Berkeley’s should be con-

sidered. We would suggest, how
ever, removing the grade point
requirement, because students
with B averages are relatively
safe in taking hard courses.

Burlington

Galcy lord

I

in a society so completely unstructured that he becomes
confused about the nature of the ultimate resolution he
seeks. He can’t settle things by capturing or killing any
one person and the threads of the mystery he is trying
to unravel are made of such widely disparate material
that even if he succeeds in untangling things, the possibility remains that he won’t know anything that really
matters. In addition, he is aware of this and troubled
by it, and he has no choice but to continue. Unfortunately, Jack Smight, the director, has handled this aspect
of the movie poorly. The sense of chaos and aimless,
furious motion that he is reaching for tends to envelope
the action and dominate it so that Smight loses control
over the story.

If you’ve never used on electric shaver before, the Norelco 'FlipTop' Speedshaver® is a great way to find out the easier side of
shaving. Its rotary blades stroke whiskers off. Never cut or nick.
They won't hurt you. Neither will the price, which is about the
same as a year's supply of razor blades and shave cream.
P S. If you want to spend a littlemore, get the Norelco Speedshaver
30 (at right). 35% closer shoves. 'Floating heads, - loo. And a
pop-up trimmer for sideburns. All the trimmings. From shave to
price, it’s clear about any Norelco—you can't get stung!

Norelco'

The Close Electric Shave

&lt;£&gt;1966 North Amancan Philip* Company, Inc.. 100 Eo»f 42nd

Sfr««r.

N«w

Yort.

York 10017

�Tuesday, May 3, 1966

Albright-Knox Exhibit
An exhibition of 217 works collected by the late A. Conger
Goodyear will open April 30 at
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery,
Buffalo.

works to the gallery. The bulk of
those—271—are included in the
A Conger Goodyear Fund, established in January, 1964, four
months before his death.

Over a half-century, Gen. Goodyear presented a total of 361 art

The exhibition, which continues through June 6, includes outstanding works from the Goodyear Fund, as well as loans from
private collections and museums.

Everything Photographic for

Professional

&amp;

Amateur Use

DELAWARE CAMERA
MART
Movie Rentals

Cameras
Supplies
Projectors
Photo Finishing
*

Gen. Goodyear’s gifts include
works by such artists as Gauguin,
Van Gogh, Seurat, Toulouse-Lautrec, Daumier, Degas, Leger, Pissarro and many others.

Gen. Goodyear first was elected to the Board of Directors of
the Buffalo Fine Arts Academy
in 1912. He was vice president
from 1925 to 1928, when he left
Buffalo. He was one of the founders of the Museum of Modern
Art, New York, and was its first
president, serving for 10 years.

*

2635 Delaware Ave.
877-3317

/aUDRB^TdEL'Sv

/records \A Frosh Split
\

162 Broadway
1271 Jaffanon

B.tw~n RiWy t&gt; Landoo

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1394 Flllmora Ava

Jf/;

SPECIALISTS IN:

/

:

PI

»

the Lew “Go-Co“ Price*

10% STUDENT
DISCOUNTS

The UB freshman baseball team
moved its record to 3-1 by splitting a doubleheader with Monroe
Community Colege at Clark Field
Saturday. Tom Rectenwald, who
was the winning pitcher in UB’s
first two triumphs, won his third
in the opener with a six-hitter
as UB breezed, 4-0.
In the second game, the Bulls
committed six errors and consequently dropped a 6-3 verdict
to the Rochesterians.

UssiisiimSL^lsnii

*
*

*

Slide Rules
Drafting Sets
Drafting Supplies, Etc.
■(■Malar

W

sstf Mtaaoilar

MICROSCOPES

,

By STEVE FARBMAN

The intramural scene came to
a close last week after a busy
two-week fencing, track and volleyball session.
In the fencing tournament held
in Clark Gym on April 21, Jim
Mills of Gamma Phi won the
individual title. Bob Calo of AEPi
finished second and Len Schneider of Phi Ep third.
In team results, the Phi Ep
contingent, Mark Grashow. Len
Schneider, Jay Steinberg and Alec
Glasser, took first place with 30
points, two better than runnerup AEPi, Gamma Phi placed third
with 18 points.

(Skanks), 17-4%; high jump
Mark Cellar (SAJf) 5-9; shot put
—Jack Huttner (Phi Ep), 52-6%;
300-yd shuttle relay—Pi Lambda
Tau (Boiler, May, Cole, Winship),
35.9; 440-yd. shuttle relay—Phi
Ep (Torres, Schneider, Barnett,
Zolin), 50.9.
The final volleyball results will
be printed in Friday’s paper,
along with the final Pahlowitz
Trophy standings, which are currently being compiled.
—

The Intramural Awards Dinner

—originally scheduled for this
evening
had to be cancelled
since only two fraternities,
AKPsi and AEPi, paid to go to
it. This action certainly didn't
brighten the fraternity image on
this campus—particularly in the
eyes of the athletic department
and Intramural Office—and all
fraternities except two have only
—

themselves to blame.

On April 25, the track meet
was held at Rotary Field. After
•the dust had settled, Leon Lewis
of the Skanks had copped individual honors with a double
in the 100-yd. dash and the high
jump, while Phi Ep won three
events to gain team supremacy
with 63.5 points.
In a close battle for second
place, SAM scored 35 points, Pi
Lambda Tau 32.5 and the Skanks
and the Magic 7, 31 each.

Individual results: 75-yd. dash
—Morris Torres, Phi Ep, 8.7; 100yd. dash—Leon Lewis (Skanks),
11,1; mile—Ed Ingarman (AEPi),
5:24.3; broad jump—Leon Lewis

THE

BASEBALL BULLS ROUT GENESEO

highgate

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3435 BAILEY AVENUE at Highgate
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INTRAMURALS

Prescription and non-prescription Drugs
Crutches, First-Aid Supplies

ERIE BLUEPRINT
SUPPLY 00.
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PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

■

We Recognize Student Identification Cards

,

Young Men! Students Soldiers! Young Men Students!
If You Never See
Another Motion Picture

,

SEE THIS ONE!
THE LANDAU/UNGER COMPANY PRESENTS

DIRK BOGARDE TOM COURTENAY LEO McKERN
in JOSEPH LOSEV'S
•

-

ft

KING...
COUNTRY
FOSTER

also starring BARRY
Directed by JOSEPH LOSEY • Produced by JOSEPH LOSSY
and HOP MAN PPIGGEN Screenplay by EVAN JONES Music by LARRY AOLER
Eiecutrve Producer DANIEL M. ANGEL • a BHE PRODUCTION
Prints by Moyielab Distributed by American International Pictures
•

•

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Exclusive
Western New York
Engagement!

Glen Art Theatre
5606 MAIN STREET
WILLIAMSVILLE, N.Y.

STUDENT
RATES)

�*
=

3, 1966

Tuesday, May

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

gjpss-'ffEwaa 8»®»ws*- s
(=

-/&lt;=-

—

-■*—

=

UB Baseball Team Loses to
Syracuse, Routs Geneseo
(One of a series of articles written exclusively for The
Spectrum by Head Football Coach Richard “Doc” Urich.)

Spring practice has only a few more days left and
so far it has been a satisfactory experience for the
coaches and. I hope, the players. Naturally there have
been some disappointments, but by and large I feel that
a great deal of progress has been made toward our
objective of fielding a winning and an interesting team
fov UB students this fall.
This Friday night. at X :00 o’clock, we will close
spring practice with the traditional game between the
varsity and a team composed of UB alumni. This game
will be played at the Williamsville High School Field.

The reason for this is that the annual UB Invitational
Track &amp; Field Meet will be held at Rotary Field on
Saturday afternoon. Students will, of course, be admitted
free to the game at Williamsville simply by showing
their I.D. card. I certainly hope that as many of you
who possibly can will attend the game. In this connection
I might add that 1 am extremely gratified at the student
turnouts at our practice sessions so far. It bespeaks well
of the interest and spirit on the campus.
We have split the squad into offensive and defensive
units except for about 10 players whom we have not
decided upon what position they are best suited for or
who could be the best at their particular position on
offense and defense. Although there are some colleges
that prefer to field separate units that can play both
offense and defense, we feel that the two-platoon system
is best. For one thing, it gives more boys a chance to
play. Also, a team with units going both ways is at a
disadvantage against another team which constantly
inserts fresh players for the game circumstances. Our
experience has been that adequately rested players are
less susceptible to injuries. So far this spring we have
been fortunate in the injury department in that nothing
serious has occurred.
A number of students have inquired about the offensive formations we have displayed so far. We have been
using two basic formations, the I-Formation and what
is usually called a Pro Set, although I prefer to think of
it simply as a Spread Formation. In both cases we use a
split end. and in the Spread we also use a flanker back
who can be on the opposite or the same side as the split
end. The advantage of the Spread is that it gives your
pass receivers a chance to get downfield and run their
patterns without getting tangled up in traffic at the
line of scrimmage.
The 1-Formation is good that in that you are able
to effectively mask the point of attack until the last split
second. It is deceptive in that both runs and passes start
with the same basic movement.
This is perhaps an oversimplified explanation of
our offense. We have a number of variations that we will
install in the fall.
Our desire is to have a variegated offense that will
keep our opponents trying to adjust to us, rather than
finding ourselves in the position of trying to adjust a
limited offense to their defenses. To win football games
you simply must be able to score often. This is what
we intend to do.

Track Team Divides 2
The improving I'B track team
scored its first win of the
ason
last Tuesday by routing Canisius
and Niagara Community College
in a triangular meet at Rotary
Field UB scored 130 points to 20
for Canisius and 11 for Niagara
CC
Double victories by Larry Nau
kam. Dick Genau and Chuck Stu
art highlighted the victory as the
Bulls took first in every event
except one.

Against Cortland at Rotary
Field Friday, the Bulls dropped
an 87 58 decision Art Walker
was brilliant in a losing effort
as he doubled in (he 100 and 220.
and anchored the 440 relay team's
record-breaking win. The relay
team, also consisting of Jim Web-

ber, Jim McEwan and John Berk-

houdt. toured the distance in a
blistering

44.5.

The team competed in the LeMoyne Relays in Syracuse Monday and will journey to Ithaca
Thursday
UB 130, Canisius 20,

Niag. CC 11

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Ewan. John Barkhou&lt;J». Arl Walktf). CaMilo—Bob SlenijMjl
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war
kam IB), Pa»a *aa$a (B). Dan
(Cl. :U.A ■t-Gonou (II. Jock Mrowko (I), Alssougf (I). 3d 5 H0-8ork.
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The U.B. baseball team dropped its second straight road game
Wednesday as the Bulls lost 10-6
to Syracuse, giving up ten unearned runs to the Orangemen.
The Bulls outhit Syracusce, 12-11,
and were given nine walks by
Syracuse pitcher Dave Borkhius,
but until the ninth inning the
Bulls could not come up with the
clutch hits—leaving 15 men on

base. Ken Rutkowski started for
UB, and the sophomore pitched
good ball as U.B. defensive lapses accounted for all five unearned runs Ken allowed. Tim Uraskevich relieved in the seventh,
and was the victim of five more
unearned runs as UB committed
three errors to help the Syracuse
rally. UB, trailing 10-1, scored
five runs in the ninth inning,
and had the bases loaded when
great plays by the Syracuse third
baseman and pitcher ended UB’s
hopes.

Ken Rutkowski had three hits,
while Fran Buchta, Brian Hansen, and Jim Duprey each had
two singles for the Bulls. Dave
Chernevetz led the Syracuse hitting attack with three hits for
the Orangemen,
Friday, the Bulls trounced Genesee, 9-1, on the UB diamond.
Hansen raised his average to .538
with two singles and a triple in
three trips to the plate to pace a
13-hit onslaught. Doug Long, Rutkowski and pitcher Don Potwora
each had two hits.
Potwora, in lifting his record
to 3-0, pitched seven innings of

GENESEO

P
N'

k.

If

I-

KEN RUTKOWSKI

shutout ball before being relieved by John Busch, who pitched
two innings of effective relief.
The Bulls put the game out of
reach in a four-run sixth inning,
featured by Ron Leiser’s two-run
single.

BASEBALL NOTE S—TIB
has an overall batting average
Hansen and Rutof .306
kowski lead the hitters with
marks of .538 and .500, respeclively
The pitching staff
owns an earned run average of
1.41 with Rutkowski leading the
department with an 0.76 mark
UB played at Canisius Monday and returns home for a
doubleheader with St. Bonaven-

ture Wednesday,

SPORTS TRIVIA
All entries for today's sports

trivia contest, the final one of
the year, must be handed to the

sports desk of the Spectrum by
Wednesday, May 4, at noon. Prizewinners of and answers to today's
contest will appear in this Friday's paper.

known Merkle blunder of 1908?

9. What is the name of Tony
Oliva's brother?

What baseball manager was

10.
nicknamed the “Miracle Man”?

1. Who is the only baseball
player to score six runs in one
major league game twice

2. To which Brooklyn Dodger
did Wilbert Robinson once say,
if you don't succeed at first, try
the outfield

The co-winners of the April 22
quiz are David Traum and Mark
Brennan, both of whom correctly answered five questions.

'■

3. The five players that comprised the "Murderers’ Row” of
the 1929 Philadelphia Athletics
were Mickey Cochrane, George
Haas, A1 Simmons, Jimmy Foxx
and
4. What daily double combination clicked the most times at
Buffalo Raceway in 1965?

5. Who was Jim Gentile's bat
ting pupil in the Vitalis commercial?

6. How long was Doug Sanders
putt on the aforementioned com
mercial?

7. Who was the hero of the
Claire Bee sports series?
8. Who was the Chicago Cubs'
second-baseman credited with the
forceout on the New York Gi-

ants’ Fred

Merkle in

the well-

The answers

1. Calamity Jane. 2. Arnold
Tucker. 3, Jack Lamabe. 4. Harry
Greb. 5. Jack Manders, 6. Mike
Goliat. 7. Wee Yankee and Dalton's Pamela. 8. John Prbgenzer.
9. Bucky Pope.
10. Art Hicks
and Hank Gunter,
In the April 19 contest, due to
conflicting sources, the Spectrum
—after a lengthy deliberation—has decided to allow either Charlie Neal or Felix Mantilla as an
acceptable answer to the question,
“Who made the first error in the
history of the New York Mets?"
Due to this change, the entries
submitted by Robert Lieberman
and Dan Alterman qualified for
a first-place tie with David Wallick with ten correct answers.

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"Th

UB Netmen
Drop Pair
The UB tennis team lost its
first match of the season Wednesday, bowing to host Hobart
College, 6-3. Pete Lederman and
Don Mingle remained unbeaten
for UB in singles and doubles.
The Bulls traveled to Syracuse
Friday to play what turned out
to be a hotly contested match—verbally as well as physically. As
the bright sun slowly set, the
Orangemen walked off the courts
with a narrow 5-4 win. Lederman,
however, remained
singles for UB.

unbeaten in

Bill Sanford’s netmen, now 5-2,
wil attempt to regain their winning ways when they face Colgate at home at 3 p.m. this afternoon. Thursday the team travels
to Niagara.
Syracuse

5, Buffalo 4

6'zezinski (UB) d. Larry G«nnger 7-5. 6-3. Russ Drowne (S) d. Lenny
Schneider 7-5, 6-3. Andy Elsea CS) d
Matt Yuschik 6-1, 6-2 Pe*e Lederman
(Ufl) d. Kapil Tayal 6-3, 1-6, 10-0 Ken
Ritzenberg (S) d. Don Mingle 6-3, 6-1
Jim Ripley (UB) d. Randy Roe 6-1, 3-6.
6-4. Brzezinski-Yuschik (UB) d. GaringerDrowne 7-5. 2-6, 7-5. Elsea-Rltzenberg
(S) d. Laderman-Mingl# 6-4, 7-5. Taya
Roe (S) d. Schn^Jer-Ripley 6-2, 6-3.
Denny

Caps and gowns will
be distributed in the Norton Card Room, basement
floor: May 25-27. 8:30-5
p.m. and Saturday, May
28, 10-2 p.m.
Used paperback books
in reasonably good conditions are needed by the
Browsing Library, Norton 255.

�</text>
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NO

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW

COMPACT FOR

I

FRIDAY

VOLUME 16

I

H

,

H

(See Page

BUFFALO, NEW L ,YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1966

NO. 42

Cartoonist Feiffer to Speak in Fillmore Room
Jules Feiffer, a social critic
and humorist whose cartoons appear in 65 newspapers throughout the United States, will lecture
on “Life-Times-and The Funny
Pages" Wednesday, April 27, 8:30
p.ra. in the Fillmore Room.
Feiffer’s cartoons are described
in Life as “biting, intellectual,
and strongly flavored with
Freud.” He has also written seven
books, one a novel, and two plays.
Feiffer won a gold medal at
the age of five for a drawing of
Tom Mix arresting some outlaws.
After high school he enrolled at
the Arts Students League of New
York, attended drawing classes
at Pratt Institute in New York,
and drew “Clifford”, a Sunday
cartoon-page feature which ran
in six newspapers.
While serving for two years in

JULES FEIFFER

Six Greek Frats
Plan An Appeal
To Federal Court
A Supreme Court ruling which
barred national social organizations from State University campuses will be appealed by four
fraternities and two sororities
before May 9.

the Signal Corps, Feiffer developed the character of Munro, a
four-year-old boy who is drafted
into the army by mistake.
Unable to sell a manuscript
about Munro, he drifted from job
to job until his cartoons in the
Village Voice caught on.

In April 1958, Feiffer's cartoons were published in a book,
Sick, Sick, Sick, -subtitled A Guide
to Non-Confident Living. Munro
eventually appeared in his second best-selling collection, Passionella.

In April 1961 an animated version of Munro’s adventures was
awarded the Oscar of the Academy of Motion pictures Arts and
Sciences as the best short-subject
cartoon of the year.
Critic Millstein has depicted
Feiffer as being “alone and un-

afraid in a world made of
just about all of the intellectual
shams and shibboleths to which
our culture subscribes.” Feiffer
has questioned what he views as
the hypocritical and has defended what he regards as the human.
Feiffer’s cartoons are distributed by Hall Syndicate to American
newspapers, as well as papers in
Paris, London, Rome, and Stockholm. His cartoons also appear

L. Halpern
said that he expects action on
the appeal before June.

Ralph

In 1953 the Board of Trustees
prohibited social organizations
from State University campuses.
When UB joined the state system
in 1962, the organizations were
given until 1967 to denationalize.

The appeal is in its final stage.
Supreme Court Justice Matthew
J. Jason had upheld the Trustees’ ban on the organizations.
His decision was upheld by the
Appellate Division.
Mr. Halpem has contended that

the trustees classification of local
and national is unreasonable because they are performing the
same functions
In 1964 the organizations presented an appeal to the courts
and were granted an injuetion
which allowed pledging on a national basis in the fall and spring
of 1964. The organizations continue to pledge on a national
basis.
Inter-fraternity Council Vicepresident David Frank© commented, “We will continue to remain
national organizations until a decision is reached. There will be
no action against the national
farternities and sororities until
the case is decided.”
The fraternities involved are
Beta Sigma Phi, Sigma Alpha Mu,
Phi Epsilon Pi, and Phi Kappa
Psi. The sororities are Sigma
Delta Tau and Phi Sigma Sigma.

SDS Plans to Sponsor
Counter Draft Test
CHICAGO (CPS)—Students for
a Democratic Society is planning
a nationwide distribution of literature and a “counter draft
test” on each of the three dates
the Selective Service System has

chosen for its examination for
college students.
SDS National Secretary, Paul
Booth estimated that two-and-one
half million students will take the
(Cont’d

on Pg.

12)

eor ro

LCHi ft MORE
THAM Mi
POSH S'

\

in Playboy Magazine, Holiday,
Sports Illustrated and others. His
work still appears weekly in the
Village Voice.
Actors re-create Feiffer's cartoon characters in The Feiffer
Film, which has been released to
colleges recently.

Refreshments will follow the
lecture, arranged by the Student

Senate Convocations Committee.

Furnas Refuses Meeting With GFCSS; Anything Goes
Will Highlight
Stand
Will
on Decision to Administer Spring Weekend
Selective Service Deferment Exam
In a letter to retiring University
President Clifford Furnas, the
Graduate Faculty Committee on
the Selective Service (GFCSS)
asked that he reconsider his decision to administer the Selective
Service Draft Deferment Examination on this campus. Dr. Furnas
refused either to meet with them
or to alter present plans for administering the exam.
The deferment test will be
given on campus during May and
June of this year. Those students
who fear that their draft classifications may be changed from
student deferments can gain another full year of deferment by
achieving a successful score on
the exam.

is required to attend the exam,
Furnas’ refusal to meet with a

ing the test, according to Miss

East.

-

Attorney

you've

ter so werm!

The GFCSS questions the entire concept of deferment for a
student status. Committee members feel that college attendance
is greatly dependent upon financial status and socio-economic
background and any preferential
treatment for students is thus
undemocratic. The committee is
further in disagreement with the
exam itself; they feel that it is
discriminatory in that it is geared
to aptitudes most highly developed in science students, as demonstrated by statistics obtained from
similar exams given during the

Korean War.

According to Miss Ruth East,

dent.

Dr. Furnas feels that the

test is warranted on campus in

that those students who wish to
take it may do so, and no one

CLIFFORD

URNAS

delegation from the committee is
an expression of his resolve to
maintain current policy regard-

The Spring Weekend Committee announced that “Anything
Goes” will begin with showings
of "The Music Man" today and
tomorrow in the Conference Theater.
Voting for the Spring Weekend Queen will be held in the
Norton Center Lounge Wednesday and Thursday from 9 a.m.

to 4

p.m.

The Laurentian Singers from
St. Lawrence University will perform in the Fillmore Room at
2:30 p.m. Wednesday. Fraternities, sororities. Arnold Air Society, and Angel Flight will compete in Stunt Night at 8:30 p.m.
in the Gym.

At a meeting scheduled for

"Coffee House" entertainment
wil be held in the Rathskcllar
rom 10 a.m. to 2 a.m„ and coffee

hers of the Graduate-F acuity
Committee on Selective Service
will discuss possible courses of
action to Furnas' refusal.

the campus, the city, and nearby
colleges will perform and poetry
will be read. Anyone wishing to
perform should contact Sandy
Baco.

WBFO Will Celebrate UB's Anniversary
With University Month' On Campus Radio
WBFO will present a program
series on UB’s past, present, and
future in celebration of “University Month” May 2-31.
Former UB Vice-President Dr.
G. Lester Anderson will begin
the series with a discussion of
“The University Purpose,” May 2
at 7:30 p.m. “These Restless
Men,” a documentary history of
the university, will be presented
at 8:15 p.ni UB's initial development, its evolution into a major
educational center, the “Furnas
years,” and UB’s stature as a
state university will be reviewed.
Dr. Clifford Fumas will describe the individual colleges of
the university and their future
goals in a program on “The
University and Its Colleges” May
3 at 10 p.m.

“The University and Chancellor
Samuel Paul Capen’” will be
broadcast May 4 at 10 p.m. Dr,
Capen will review the growth
of the institution, its role in the
community, and its academic
freedom traditions.

Senior students Jonathan Z.
Friedman and John Edward
Deane will discuss the fading
traditions and changing attitudes
among students and faculty since
UB became a state university on
“The University in Transition”
May 5 at 10 p.m.
An interview with Dr. Peter F.
Regan, III, V i c e-President for

Health Affairs, will be held on

“University Perspective” May 10
at 10 p.m.
Dr. Claude Puffer will discuss
"University Expansion” May 11
at 10 p.m. and History Professor
John T. Horton will speak on
the “University Heritage” May
12 at 10 p.m.
“The University and Research”
will be discussed by Dr. Raymond

Ewell, Vice-President for Research and government consultant, May 17 at 10 p.m.
“The University as a Landmark,” a program of taped discussions by faculty and community members, originally produced
by WBFO in honor of the College

of Arts and Sciences’ 50th an
niversary in 1964, will be rebroadcast May 18 at 6:30 p.m.
Dr. John T. Horton will reminisce about the past forty years
of the university on “The University and Its Past" May 18 at 10
p.m.

A musical tour through old UB
favorites such as the Alma Mater,
the Football Song, and Herds on
the Rampage will be heard aMy
19 at 10 p.m.
The Computer Center will be
discussed May 24 at 10 p.m.

An informal discussion with
three deans who have served the
College of Arts and Sciences
since its formation 52 years ago
will be held on “The Three
Deans” May 25 at 10 p.m.
Chancellor Furnas will discuss
“The University and Chancellor
Furnas” May 26 at 10 p.m.
The final program of the series
will concern “The State University of New York” with a discussion of the system by State
University President Samuel B.
Gould.

Friday's events will begin with
a heralding parade proceeding at
10:30 p.m. from Allenhurst and
ending at Norton. A Trike Grand
Prix, sponsored by Theta Chi
Fraternity, will be held at 12:30
p.m. in Tower Parking Lot. followed by Olympic competitions
in front of Tower at 2 p.m. Thirteen groups will compete in a
tug-of-war, watermelon eating, a
human totem pole, and relays.
A semi-formal dance will be
held Friday at the Hearthstone
Manor in Cheektowaga from 9
p m. to 1 a.m.

At the dance, held in honor
of retiring President Clifford C.
Furnas, the Queen will be crowned and the Mr. Faculty Award
will be presented. Tickets may be
purchased for S3 per couple at
the Norton Ticket Office.
Singer Nina Simone and comedian Milt Kamen will perform
Saturday in the Gym at 8:30 p.m.
Tickets may be purchased in the
Nortoh Ticket Office,
Tower Hall will hold an open
house Sunday afternoon, followed by a fireworks display in the
Baird Parking Lot.
The play “The Birthday Party”
will be performed Thursday. Friday. and Saturday at 8 p.m. in
Baird Hall.

�10% OFF

On all required books

including

outlines

We Pay More
For Used Books

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Summer Registration
In Progress For All
Three Semesters
Advance registration for the
1966 Summer Session is now in
progress, and will continue until
May 20 in 201 Hayes, 8:30-4 weekdays.

University College students
must obtain their advisor’s signature on registration cards. Senior division or graduate students
must obtain faculty signatures.

v w"

m

Tue«lay, April 26, W66

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

The first session will run from
June 6-July 15, the second from
June 27-August 5, and the third

’

from July 18-August 26, Students
are permitted to enroll in any

,

combination of the three sessions,

provided enrollment does not exceed one credit per week of at-

Juniors Inducted Into Women's Honor Society;
Dean Scudder Delivers Keynote Speech
faith in students, quoting the late
John F. Kennedy: “Each man
should make a difference and
every man should try,”

Eleven junior women were inducted into Cap and Gown last
Thursday, at the Second Annual
Formal Dessert honoring women
students for scholarship, leadership, or service.
The new members of Cap and
Gown are: Hedda Beckman, Rosa
Lynn Brothman, Ellen Cardone,
Rhea From, L,i n d a McIntyre,
Mary Hayes, Lauren Jacobs,
Elaine Kwitowski, Susan Orlofsky, Nancy Simonoff and Christa
Ulbricht.
Dean of Women Jeanette Scud-

der delivered the opening address
to 200 guests including Mrs. Clifford Fur

her

Mrs. Lars Potter, Assistant Professor of Drama and Speech, discussed “The Art of Speaking,”
emphasizing that too often this
“priceless gift is not invested
wisely.”

The Senior Book Award was
presented to Robert Engel. Sandra Atlas received Chi Omega’s

Social Science Award.

The Student Council of the
School of Nursing named Diane
Kile Outstanding Student Nurse.

Joan Breckenridge received the

Ann

Sengbusch Leadership

Award and Joyce Kryway received the Dr. S. Mouchly Small
Award. The Archena K. Rosenthal Award was given to Beth
Ann Steger.

Barbara Popaduch was presented with the Medical Technology A s s o c i at i o n’s Founders
Award.
Panhellenic Scholarships were
awarded to Nonnie Burke and
Diane Ives. New officers of the
Panhellenic Council announced
are:
Christa Ulbricht, Elaine
Greenberg, Claudia Elliot, Patricia Miller and Janet Leslie.

tendance.

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Since the second session overlaps the first, and the third overlaps the second, students planning to register for the first
or secod session may carry 3
semester hours in one session
and 6 in the other, a maximum
of 9 semester hours.
Undergraduates with an overall B average (2.00) or better
and graduate students are permitted to carry an additional 2
semester hours.
iRegular registration will be
held the first day of each session.

1966 Summer Session Cata-

logues are available in 143 Hayes.

THE SPECTRUM
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by

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V

�Tuesday, April 26, 1966

GFC Urges !Symbolic Independence' Psychology Dept. Holds Symposium

Male Camp
Counselors Needed

Small church camp on lake,
30 miles from Buffalo, requires
Protestant counselors
male
willing to devote themselves
to the needs of children, from
July 5 to September 3. Excellent opportunity for work
in unique program. Salary,
meals, and lodging provided.
Call Mrs. Shadle, First Presbyterian Church,
9 to 5 o'clock.

TT 4-7250, from

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*

The Graduate Faculty Committee on the Selective Service Ut
tee on the Selective Service
(GFCSS) issued an open letter
urging the University to "lay

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claim to at least a shred of symbolic independence by insisting
that its men and facilities not
be used for the administration
(draft) test.”
The GFCSS stated that the test
is a denial of the university's
traditional right to "define for
ourselves what standards we
might establish for membership
in the academic community."
If we allow the military to
protect some students, the GFCSS
said, we are granting them the
right to define membership in
the university and the power to
dictate intellectual ehterprizes.
The committee added that "to
permit some students to be protected from the follies of society
implies the creation of an elite
social group which shifts onto
the less privileged in our society
the burden of politics and war.”
“We ask our colleagues and
Deans,” the letter continues, “to
join with us in a redefinition of
scholarly enterprise. If Molloch
would give us his test, is it too
much to ask that he use his own
facilities?”

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The letter concluded, “It there
is to be a rebirth of our independence and freedom, the true
freedom which comes from responsibility and caring engagement, then we must join in a
disengagement from the military
and put an end to our disengagement from society.”
The GFCSS sent a letter to
President Furnas last week requesting that he reconsider his
decision to use the University
testing facilities for the administration of the Selective Service
test.

ArtCarvecl settings
hold a diamond so delicately,
it’s almost frightening.

Representatives of three approaches to psychotherapy will
be heard at the First Annual
Symposium of the Psychology
Department, April 28 and 29.
The topic of this year’s symposium is “Research In Individual
Psychotherapy.” The second half
of the two-part program on this
topic will be held in October
According to Professor Irving
Feldman, the two-part symposium
is expected to become an annual
presentation of the department,
under a general title of “Studies
In Psychotherapy and Behavior
Participants
week’s program will be Dr. Ernest Haggard
of the University of Illinois Medical Center, Dr. Charles Truax
of the University of Arkansas,
and Dr. 0. Hobart Mowrer of
the University of Illinois.
Dr. Feldman explained that
the program is planned chiefly
for the benefit of graduate students in the clinical program, as
well as faculty members and

psychologists in the community.
The sessions arc, however, open
to the public and undergraduates
are invited to attend.
Dr. Haggard will speak at 9:15

The State Assembly passed a
bill to increase state aid to education from $600 to $660 per
pupil April 18.
The bill, passed by a 150-0
vote, was forwarded to the State
Senate for action. A compromise
plan was presented by Senate
Majority header E a r 1 IJrydges

books, New Group Psychotherapy and The Crisis in Religion and Psychiatry.
The Symposium will close with
a panel discussion, 1:30 Friday
in Acheson 70,

which includes protection for low
expenditure school districts.
T h e s e districts, according to
Brydges. might not receive a full
share per pupil under the state
formula.
The legislation will cost the
New York State taxpayers an
extra $74 million this year.

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Dr. Haggard has
been engaged in work on the research applications of the psychoanalytic school of therapy.
Dr, Truax, who will speak on
“The Theraputic Relationship:
The Contribution of Patient and
Therapist to Cast Outcome,” 1:30
in Acheson 5. has been associated
with the Client-Centered therapy
movement initiated by Carl Rogers. This school stresses “Unconditional Regard" for the client,
and the use of the individual’s
own insights and resources to
solve his problems.
Dr. Mowrer, who has been developing the applications of learning theory to therapy, will speak
Friday at 9:30 in the Conference
Theater on "The Behavior Therapies. with Special Reference to
Modeling and Imitation.” Dr.
Mowrer is the author of two re-

State Assembly OK s Bill

Albany

-v
i Vi h/'

a.m. Thursday in the Norton Conference Theater on “The Clinical

Change.”

NEW YORK

1

»

Approaches to Psychotherapy
To Be Discussed

Committee Asks Denial of
‘Men &amp; Facilities’ for Draft Test

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PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

V-

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.

home to an economy deflating from its
war time expansion. To these add the
civilians who will be laid off as military
For any number of reasons, it has become fashionable to see President Johnson contracts are canceled..
in either one of two extreme lights: either
Unlike WWII, there is no shortage of
he is a great man, come in the nick of consumer products. Plants turning out
time to save America; or as a grotesque bombs and tanks won’t be able to switch
villain perpetrating evil throughout the over to the production of cars and refrigglobe, in the name of “national interest.” erators. Unlike WWII, there is no devaHowever, it is possible to suppose that stated Europe to rebuild. Instead, there
were it not for our criminally stupid venare the powerful European economies and
tures in Viet Nam and Latin America, the rapidly rising developing nations to
Pres. Johnson might be seen for what compete with us for world markets.
he is—a disciple of Roosevelt operating
To this inflated labor market in a dein the tradition of Kennedy. Johnson
flated economy add the impact of “cyberlearned his political lessons from Roosevelt, and who could ask for a better nation”. This marriage of automationed
production and computer management
mentor? He inherited a mess from Kennedy, and he has attempted to impose a threatens sweeping changes on all labor
simplistic view of “Manifest Destiny” of levels. Industry will demand a highly
a world, rife with embryonic nationalism educated but very small work force.
and incredibly painful social development.
Robert Theobald, a noted economist,
predicted in testimony before Congress,
His domestic policy (The “War on
Poverty”, the passage of the Civil Rights “Two percent of the population will, in
Bill, and the passage and expansion of the discernible future, be able to produce
“Medicare”, etc.) can be viewed as an all the goods and services needed to feed,
extension of the progressive policies of clothe, and run our society with the aid
The cybernation revoluF.D.R. (The National Relief Agency, The of machines .
tion will force man’s mind out of the
C.C.C. and the W.P.A.). His attitude productive
system as surely as the industoward the struggles for national liberation in South East Asia may be seen as trial revolution forced out man’s muscle.”
an extension of Roosevelt’s simplistic atThe unemployment problem that faces
titude toward the same struggle in Spain. the Negro and the high school dropout
today will confront the returned GI and
It is impossible to white-wash Johnson, white collar worker tomorrow.
but it is possible to suppose that had he
The piecemeal solutions being applied
not inherited an untenable situation in
Viet Nam from John Kennedy, he might to visible labor problems and unemploybe an exceptionally progressive and vital ment by the Federal government fail compresident.
But he did, and he cannot pletely to even recognize the crisis imescape the responsibility of prosecuting minent and inherent in the present U.S.
a war in a land where we are not wanted economy.
against an enemy whose platforms sound
Lyndon Johnson is applying the corlike the “New Deal.”
rect answers to problems of the thirties.
But the questions of the sixties are being
Viet Nam is like Spain—it’s not like asked.
Munich!
.

.

Johnson is like Roosevelt—not

—R.D. Volpe
—R.M. Goldberg

like

Part II

Whitney M. Young Jr., executive director of the National Urban League, has

New Myths and
Old Realities
Part I

Despite all the fancy slogans of “too
little too late”, “welfare state" and “guns
or butter”, that have been used in the
verbal assault on Lyndon Johnson's “newest deal” programs, critics from neither
the Right nor the Left have put the entire
economic problem, with all its implications, before the public eye.
Job discrimination, cyclical poverty,
and strikes of public employees have occupied the limelight. Relatively little attention has been focused on the problems
inherent in our new industrial complex.
Neither has anyone ventured to examine
the impending turmoil implicit in the Vietnam war economy.
Last summer’s riots in Watts and Harlem, the promise of more in Oakland and
the Mississippi Delta; the continuing generations of undereducated children following undereducated parents into poverty in
Appalachia; and labor battles for liveable
salaries for Teachers, Nurses and Transit
employees have occupied the newspaper
headlines. But these problems only ride
the crest, like the small visible surface of
an iceberg. They don’t reveal the danger
lurking below.
Just below the surface is the problem
of Vietnam. When the war ends, three
hundred thousand soldiers will return

inherited moral capital, so
that, happily, their actions often
do not rigorously follow the logic
of their beliefs.” For example,
should lovers take seriously the
philosophy of cut-up Norman
Mailer who writes, two years
after his attack on one of his
wives,” So long as you use a
knife, there’s some love left”,
lovers might experience more
than one stab in the dark.
But, you say, they’re only a
minority and nothing will come
of it. As National Review quotes
Hilaire Belloc:
on

By Phyllis Chamberlain
and Jon Simplicio

Great or Grotesque?

Kennedy!

Tuesday, April 26, 1966

'■

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

asked of the anti-poverty program “whether the real intent is to promote equality
or stop riots”
Disenchantment with the program was
vividly demonstrated last week in the Capital. Sargent Shriver, attending a “poor
peoples convention”, was “booed, jostled
and almost shouted down” as he spoke.
Cried a young woman from the Watts
district of Los Angeles, “when all this
poverty money is spent, the rich man is
going to be richer and I'm still going to
be receiving a welfare check”.
In simple language, the poor need
money. They need jobs to earn money.
They don't want Washington advisors or
corrupt local politicians passing out welfare checks like an allowance from “big
daddv".

Unemployment is the problem. Even
it the American taxpayer were prepared
to continually support a stagnant welfare
class, the problem would remain. Only
employment as a contributing member of
society can provide the dignity of full
citizenship. Employment and paychecks
are the key to mobility in an affluent

society.

The legislation of anti-poverty measures is the work of head in the sand ostrich thinkers. They prefer to entertain
the myths of their imaginary world than
the realities of the ghettos.
Most dangerous in the anti-poverty
myth is that it spreads false hope, hope
that will turn to fear when conditions

refuse to fade away. And it is that fear
that sends men into the streets, rioting
and burning in a very rational protest to
their poverty.
—Raymond D. Volpe

For some time now the political conservative has been rhetorically abused by leftist elements
of the fanatic fringe. The Spectrum (perhaps in light of its
excessively narrow views should
be called the “Wavelength”) has
been the soap box for this harangue. Many of .the articles that
appear in this paper reflect emotions and syndromes catalyzed
by half-real situations magnified
and distorted by the fanatic mind.
Ed Wolkenstein, (Spirit and the

Sword) has clinically diagnosed
him, (the conservative), as suf-

fering from “consistent psychopathic fear of communism.” Joel
Meyers, (Youth Against War and
Fascism) has described him as a
supporter of genocide and morally condemned him as a part of
“the depraved ultra-right.” Jerry

Gross, with his infinite wisdom
and compassion for all humanity,
(excluding the conservative who
is apparently outside humanity),
has judged him immoral “as far
as the working people are concerned.” Obviously he doesn't
think conservatives work. In addition, “The right wing is actually guilty of murder.” He too
labels the conservative a supporter of genocide. Jeremy Taylor, (anarachist and constitutionat the SAME time), notorist
ious for inaccuracy and use of
his column for his own irresponsible outbursts on many sujects.
has decried alleged “appalling
displays of violence,” as he implies from the right.
—

So it goes with the fanatic
fringe, (of which the above are
only a small segment), preying
on emotion, regarding themselves
as victims and, devoid of proper
perspective, resorting to rhetorical weeping and gross generalizations to gain support.
In view of the fact that these

fanatics have attached themselves
as parasites to a responsible liberal body of thought and this
body has not effectively disentangled itself from this radicalism, the conservative must attack
the Liberal movement as a whole.
Society has not yet reaped the inevitable harvest of chaos, immorality and complete social disintegration resulting from implementation of their ideas because
says Frank Meyer (National Review), “Liberals are still living

THE

“We sit by and watch the Barbarian, we tolerate him; in the
long stretches of peace we are
not afraid. We are tickled by his
irreverence, his comic inversion
of our old certitudes and our
fixed creed refreshes us; we
laugh. But as we laugh we are
watched by large and awful faces
from beyond; and on these faces
there is no smile”.
When S.D.S. executive David
Gardner says “to meet human
needs, the political institutions,
i.e., power, must be abolished”
but in the next anarchistic breath
insists that “to be accomplished
these ends need an organized society,” one wonders—if not laughs
—at his logic. The belief that to
correct imperfection in a social
system it must necessarily first
be destroyed, is frightening consequences. He damns institutions
because they “are set up for
profit and efficiency.” In other
words, efficiency is evil, and man
must live solely for his fellow
man or be coerced to fulfill his
neighbor’s needs. Many Liberals
believe that the welfare state is
in the finest American tradition.
People are now pitching tents
on the White House lawn to DEMAND poverty money (our money
and yours). Thus this progressiveLiberal-humanitarian ideology has
succeeded in reducing dignity,
destroying self-reliance, diminishing personal freedom and general! perverting traditional values.
The job of the conservative is
to offer constructive criticism
and, when warranted, to attack
the left or radical right. This
column proposes to present conservative philosophy as a cogent
alternative to the Liberal dogma,
to point out the inherent contradictions and double standards in
much of the Liberal logic and to
fill the vacuum created once dubious Liberal premises are invalidated.

SPECTRUM

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

Publication

JEREMY

Editor-in-Chief

Business

Manager

TAYLOR

RAYMOND D. VOLPE

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff—Loretta Angeline. Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen Green,
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman,
Eileen Teitler, Nancy Toder, Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg.
Feature Editor
JO ANNE LEEGANT
JOHN STINY Assistant
Staff—Bonnie Bartow. Ron Ellsworth. Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb.
Audrey Logel. Bob Martin. Suzanne Rovner. Martha Tack, William Weinstein.
Staff—Mike Castro.
J. B Sharcot.

Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Mike Dolan, Steve Farbman. Bob Frey,

Scott Forman,

Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Staff —Joanne Bouchier, Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman.
Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Staff—Carol Becker, Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern, Sandy Lippman,
Claire Shottenfeld, Susan Zuckerberg.
Staff—Terry

Mancini.

Angelo,

Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
Audrey Cash. Pat Rosenfeld, Steve

Photography Editor

Betsy Ozer,

Silverman,

Joseph

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Staff—Don Blank. Peter Bonneau. Joseph Feyes. Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber
Marc Levine. Ivan Makuch. Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman,
Robert Wynne
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Faculty

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Advisor

Financial

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EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
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National

�s

I

1

*

•.

t

•

M U i 1

'

Tuesday, April ?6, 1966

}

6

p&gt;uyn **»*■

'
-

SPECTRUM

oCetterA

RAM FIVE

the Editor

to

Human Beings, Not Labels
TO THE EDITOR

I am, by birth, a Jew. According to Dr. Zimmerman &amp; Co.,
if I am labeled a Jew by a
person attempting to discredit
my position on an issue, that
would not constitute Jew-baiting,
but “labeling.” Indeed, they have

written in their letter last Tuesday that, “Red-baiting consists
of labeling a person a Red who
is not.” The point I am trying to
make is that a person’s ideology
is not relevant in evaluating his
stand on an individual issue. To
resort to name-calling is not only
illogical. Dr. Zimmerman, but immature.

The line of thinking which produces the argument that a point
stated by a Communist is somehow less valid than the same
point stated by a non-Communist
seems somehow related to the belief that it is horrible to mistakendly bomb an “innocent" village
while it is necessary to bomb a
“guilty” one. It seems necessary

to re-assert the fact that in both

cases it is human beings being
bombed and not “labels.”

I would also like to comment

on a statement made by Miss Lenore Banks in a letter to the
editor in the same paper. She
states, "The ground rules for
dissent and consent on Vietnam
be defined and confined to those
who accept and to those who wish
to work for a change within the
existing institutions of our socity. That is, those who are opposed to totaitarian goals to totalitarian means.” Besides the
false assumption that anyone who
does not wish to work within the
established institutions is a totalitarian, this statement contains

in Santo Domingo we maintained
against the will of the people. I
would refer her to the totalitarian
South Vietnamese military “government” which we are killing
and dying for against the will
of the people. I would refer her
to the racist South African regime which is supported largely
by American banks and corporations. I would refer her to the
Indonesian regime which has murdered 300,000 “Communists” in
the last 6 years under CIA support. 1 would refer her to Mississippi. Alabama. Louisiana and
Georgia. I would refer her to the
Northern Ghettoes. I would refer
her to the Buffalo Common Council which will not permit Women’s
International League for Peace
and Freedom, certainly no more
than a liberal organization, to set
up a table downtown to collect
voter pledge cards.

the ultimate internal contradiction. She would like to use the
totalitarian method of confining
and defining in order to exclude
those who favor totalitarian
means. Furthermore, if Miss
Banks suggests that “we” are
free and “they” are slave, I would
refer her to a book by John
Gerassi, a former correspondent
for Time Magazine and currently
an editor of Newsweek, The Great
Fear in Latin America. In 461
pages, the book fully documents
how we control, exploit, police,
and literally own Latin America,
in the most brutal totalitarian
style. I would refer Miss Banks
to the totalitarian military junta

I would remind Miss Banks that
even in the most totalitarian society, freedom is enjoyed by a
minority. We Americans, 7% of
the world’s population who consume 50 r; of the world’s goods,
are indeed free.
—Daniel M. Katz

Thank You, Mr. Grump
TO THE EDITOR:

I suppose my thanks are in
order to Grump for his explication of Mr. Callan’s logical error
in the April 8 column, since Callan’s challenge was to me, not
him.
However, I question even the
small effort required in your re-

ply, Grump, First because Callan,
tied up as he is in his “logical
flow”, is a lost cause to the more
elemental aspects of logic,

Second, and very much more
important, because I appeal to
the model of men standing higher than you and I, men of our

century like Einstein, Freud,
Pauling, and Russell who, in con-

cerning themselves with the relations between men, have employed no more profound a logic
than is necessary to understand
the Golden Rule. True, the rule
is not unambiguous as applied to
a given problem, but interpretation here seems more a matter

for the heart than for

logic.

—Robert McCubbin

Callan Does Not
Reflect The Right
TO

A summer to remember

£C.W.P0STiWmjHk

THE EDITOR

Mr. Callan, in his column The
Right (April 8), stated his belief
that abortion was morally wrong
and hence all laws against abortion should not be repealed. Sev-

COLLEGE

CAMPUSag^

OF LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY

eral letters have been written in
response to his column and some
of those letters have asserted that
Mr. Callan’s views are representative of all conservatives; that
is the point I wish to clarify.

Accelerate your degree program as
you enjoy the many activities and
facilities on the 270-acre C.W. Post
campus: new residence halls, swimming, tennis, riding, bowling, the annual Long Island Festival of theArts.

The views expressed in The
Right are those of Mr. Callan
and not necessarily the views of
those on the right. I for one am
in total disagreement with his
conception of morality and I feel
that abortion should be legalized.
However, I do not wish to argue
the point at this time, for that
is not the purpose of my letter.

H

My intention is merely to refute Mr. Callan’s critics who mistakenly imagine that his opinion,
on abortion, is the opinion of
those on the right. Neither he
nor I can speak for conservatives

\'JShSS

J

-

UNDERGRADUATE COURSE
Liberal Arts and Sciences,
Pre-Professional,
Pre Engineering,
Business and Education

GRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS

In the Graduate Schools of Long Island University:

Biological Sciences, Business
Administration, Chemistry, Education,

Management Engineering, English, Foreign
Languages, Guidance and Counseling,
History. Library Science. Marine Science,

and those that have criticized him
have missed the boat by associate
ing Mr. Callan’s opinion with
those of conservatives in general.

Mathematics, Music Education. Physics,
Political Science, Sociology, Speech.

Apply now for TWO SUMMER SESSIONS

—Donald Rich

June 27—July 29 and August 1 September 2
Day and Evening
Admission open to visiting students from accredited colleges.
—

For additional information, summer bulletin and
application, phone 516 MAyfair 6-1200 or mail coupon

There will be no edition of the Spectrum on
Friday, April 29. The
next regular edition will
appear on Tuesday, May

Dean of Summer School. C. W. Post College, P.O., Green vale, L.I., NY. 11548
Please send me Summer Sessions information bulletin.
gp
□ Women's Residence Hall
□ Men's Residence Hall
Undergraduate
□
□ Graduate
□ Day
□ Evening

3rd.

This Friday is “Moving-Up Day.” There are
no classes scheduled.

I

Ik'

news

Name

-f
item
UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECT SPOTTED HOVERING OVER D C
-

Address
I

w*y

{

If visiting student,

State

State

from which college?

—

/

1

�PAGE SIX

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, April 26, 1966

Yesterday, you may have had a reason
for missing a good, nourishing breakfast.
Today, you don’t.

No
in

-mak

that's to

Each glass delivers as much protein as two eggs,
as much mineral nourishment as two strips of
crisp bacon,
more energy than two slices of buttered toast,
and even Vitamin C~the
orange juice vitamin. Q It comes in a lot of great flavors, too. Look for them in your cereal

cfl

'

section

�Tuesday, April. 2«, 1966

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

National Teacher Corps Volunteers
Sent to Ghetto Slum Schools
The National Teacher Corps
will initiate its first training sessions in a new experimental program designed to improve the
quality of public education in
urban and rural areas of poverty,
according to the National Student
Association, Applications are due
May 31 for approximately 3000
college graduates who will begin
training in June to enter slum
schools in autumn, 1966.
The program is designed to
bring young people without any
prior teaching experience into

local school systems, using their
skills and enthusiasm while giving them formal training under

a college or university program.
The three-month pre-service
training session will concentrate
on problems of slub teaching and
the sociology of poverty. The
men and women will be assigned
to public schools in poverty
areas where they will supplement regular personnel by working in classrooms and in special
enrichment programs, adult education, and community work.

Cjoodman

During this period of service.
Corps members will be enrolled
in a local university in a twoyear graduate prograrii leading
to an advanced degree.
The United Slates National
Student Association commented
that there is a great potential in
the Teacher Corps and is assisting it in reaching those students
who have already been actively
involved in social problems.
Interested students should contact NSA coordinator Jeffery Lynford in the Student Senate office.

NEW YORK—Parents shouldn’t
panic when their 18-year-old son

gets his draft call, says Dr. David
Goodman in his forthcoming
book What's Best For Your Child
—And You. As long as he’s going to be drafted anyway. 18 is
the best possible age.
In addition to his draft-call advice, Dr. Goodman shows how to
meet other common family problems that may cause anxiety or
tension. He speaks as a professional family life counselor for
more than a decade, a former
principal of one of New York’s
best known private high schools,

When that draft call comes,
Dr. Goodman writes, “eighteen is
a good age for entering military
service. The body then is full of
energy, and the imagination is
keen for adventure, adventure
that is otherwise almost impossible to experience in our much
too ordered society. Young males
like to feel their oats. They derive a tremendous satisfaction
from the sheer sense of body
power. Youth lives in its body.
Youth enjoys the physical activity that goes with military trainingf. Furthermore, a young fellow needs and enjoys the satisfaction of having measured up
to the demands of army life.
When he gets through his sixteen weeks of basic training, he
feels good because now he knows
he can take it. That's a very fine
feeling. It will hold him in good
stead when he faces up to the
requirements of his later life.
"After high school, many a
young fellow has had his fill of
schooling. He is weary of the
world of books. If fie goes on to
college, the life there frequently
bores him. Boredom is the lot of
more college freshmen than outsiders will ever believe. Yet these
same boys, though not now really

interested

I

smn

ADDRt

And make no mistake about it. . . you’ll get a solid
feeling of satisfaction from your contribution to our
nation's economic growth and to its national defense
as well

Craft Shop
|

Exhibit

DEGREE

Your degree can be a BS, MS or PhD in: MECHANICAL
AERONAUTICAL
ELECTRICAL
CHEMICAL ENMETALLURGY
GINEERING PHYSICS
CHEMISTRY
ENGINEERING SCICERAMICS
MATHEMATICS
ENCE OR APPLIED MECHANICS.

•

•

•

•

•

For more specific information (and immediate action)
concerning a career with Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft, write
today (or use coupon) to Mr. William L. Stoner. Engineering Building 1-A, Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford, Connecticut 06108.

The exhibit, entitled “Diversion Through Origins," includes
ceramic work, grisaille enameling,
and silver and gold metalwork by

SPECIALISTS IN POWER .
POWER FOR PROPULSIONPOWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS. CURRENT UTILIZATIONS
INCLUDE MILITARY AND COMMERCIAL AIRCRAFT, MISSILES,
SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.

Ulli Chcmberlain, John Dunham,

Pr0tt &amp; Whit n0y fi irer0ft o^oNOF^uD^rTcoRP.
CONNECTICUT OPERATIONS

EAST

FLORIDA OPERATIONS WEST

PALM

HARTFORD. CONNECTICUT
BEACH. FLORIDA

An

lqu.il Opportunity Employer. M

A

F

•

The professional staff of the
Norton Union Creative Craft Shop
will present its annual exhibition
of creative works through May 2
in Norton 231.

•

•

•

in education, would

return to it with new zest and
vigor after a two-year stretch in
the Army.
“Entering service after college
—or, worse still, after professional school—is not so pleasant
a prospect. The 22-or 24-year-old
young man docs not have the
same physical zest as the eighteen-year-old, nor the same spiritual exuberance. He faces Army
life as a necessary duty, not as
an exciting or interesting adventure. He’ll go through with it and
do his part, but he won't enjoy
it. What he. wants most is to go
on with his career, to get married, to settle down.
"So don’t try to hold back
your high school graduate son
from meeting his draft call, perhaps in the dim hope that later
the Army may not need him at
all. Army service is good for
your boy, and 18 is the age when
he is best ready to meet it. When
he comes out, he’ll appreciate
even more the advantages you
have to give him.”

Expanding military and commercial business
has created even more openings.

I

and as a widely read writer and
speaker.

LATE NEWS
for
ENGINEERING
GRADUATES
As you contemplate one of the most important decisions
you have yet had to make, we suggest you consider
joining us at Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft. Like most everyone else, we offer all of the usual “fringe" benefits,
including our Corporation-finai ~ed Graduate Education
Program. But, far more important to you and your
future, is the wide-open opportunity for professional
growth with a company that enjoys an enviable record of
stability. You will be working on challenging new problems of propulsion.

—

Joseph M. Fisher, Harold B. Heiwig and Sylvia Rosen. Examples
of jewelry constructioon, centrifugal casting, and handmade woodworking instruments will be ex-

hibited.

The exhibit will be held week-

days from 11 a m. to 8 p.ra. and
1 p.m. to 8 p m. on weekends.

�Tuesday, April 26, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Qualified Applicants Solicited
For Student Judiciary Position

PLAY

The Student Senate Executive
Committee and the Dean of Students’ Office are now in the process of selecting judges for next
year’s Student Judiciary. The
Student Judiciary is a separate
organ of the Student Association
which deals with disciplinary action taken against students in all
cases of non academic misconduct.
The Judiciary is also the Supreme
Judicial court of the student
body; this enables the court to
hear cases involving all student
groups on the campus.
A student justice sits in judgepeers and therefore
the criteria for selection by the
Senate and the Dean are rather
stringent.

ment of his

Any full-time student who will
be a junior or senior, and has
achieved an overall 1.0 average
and has attained a 1.0 average

during the semester prior to his
appointment, is eligible to apply.
The Student Senate appoints two
members, the Dean of Students’
Office appoints two members, and
the President picks one member.
The Constitution requires that at
least one member must be a
resident student. If you are interested in applying for the Judiciary, please send a letter to
Mr. Clinton Deveaux, President

of the Senate, 205 Norton, and
make an appointment to see Dr.
Joan Moos, Ass’t Dean of Students, Harriman Library. The letter to Mr. Deveaux should include: The reasons that you would
like to serve on the Judiciary,
the reasons that you think you
should be considered for this
post, and other pertinent activity participation, and academic information. This should be done
not later than this Friday. Preferably,

as

soon as possible.

NSA and AFN-V Conference
istration of justice through a
series of forums and seminars,
the conference will explore past
legislation, obstacles to the fulfillment of justice, and present
proposals to surmount these difficulties. With primary emphasis
on Southern legislative disputes,
the opinions of civil rights’ workers, attorneys and legislators will
be surveyed.

“The Administration of Southern Justice: Civil Rights and the
Law” will be discussed jointly
by the National Student Associa-

tion and the American Foundation on Non-Violence at Oberlin
College, April 28 through 30.
Delegates from 450 universities
and law schools are scheduled
to attend.
Discussing the equitable admin-

HAROLD PINTER'S

The Birthday
Party
Wed., April 27

'kCT

Toil

I

Ink) on

its

o(

doi &gt;c i

Sat., April 30

I!

Alli'l ;:Iki
ini'i

—

8:30 p.m.

it store

—

Baird Hall

Student Tickets $.50
Norton Ticket Office

Department of Drama and Speech

To All UB Students and Faculty:
TODAY ONLY
The

Putt Putt
Golf Course
located on Sheridan Dr

FREE

j

west of Niagara Falls
Blvd. invites you to play
HIS ORCHESTRA AND THE RAELETS
Entire Production under the supervision of JEFF D. BRO WN

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL, Thurs., May 12th, 8:45 PM
$2.50, $3.50, $4.00. $4.50
All Seats Reserved
For best choice of seats mail your order NOW with self-addressed,
stamped envelope with check or money order C/O Mrs. Elsie
Van Wie,
Denton s, 32 Court St., Buffalo 3, N.Y. Tickets also on sale at all AudreyDell Record Shops and all Doris Record Shops.
—

Please Bring Identification. Thank You

�Tuesday, Aptit ,24, 1966

SPECTRUM

Plethora of Cheap Sentimentality
Distorts Image of Late President
By GARY MUCCI

The picture of Kennedy as a
mythical god like hero is enough
to warm the fleshy tablets of the
heart of any American who finds
thinking tedious. The challenge
is to those who refuse to accept
such one sided praise that even
Bismarck, Talleyrand and Cromwell combined would scarcely
have deserved. The challenge is
aimed at those who refuse to worship a plaster image which will
soon, we may be sure, collapse
into a heap of forgotten dust.

In spite of the fact that generalities are always difficult, I think
It can be safely said that some
of the most stimulating controversies are so close to the American people that they are invariably missed. Such a controversy
exists at the present time, and it
presents a challenge to all those
who prefer not to be caught in
a swamp of sticky sentimentality.
A recent book review in Esquire magazine made the problem quite concrete and led me
to do some thinking. Since the
death of President John F. Ken-

seller lists have been crammed
with books by or about our late
president. A look at the New
York Times book review section
of January 7,1966 will show that
the most popular books in the
analysis are biographies of mir

controversy, that between histor-

Colonel John J. Herbert, Jr.,
Director of the NATO Weapon
School, has accepted a position
as Professor of Aerospace Studies
in the UB 575th ROTC Detachment.

Colonel Herbert, who served in
the Air Force 23 years, was a
B-25 pilot in World War H. He
has received the Distinguished
Flying Cross, and Air Medal with
Four Oak Leaf Clusters, and both
Air Force and Army Commendation Medals.

Receiving a bachelor of arts
The theme of John Kennedy
degree from the University of
is a terrific one. Is is a political
Omaha. Colonel Herbert attended
morality play of a Greek tragedy?
the Air Command and Staff Colhas
The solution
not been given lege, Academic Instructor School,
and it would be presumptuous to and Pilot Training School.
assume we will ever know all
This summer Colonel Herbert
of the factors involved in the will leave his current assignment
tragic administration of the late in Germany to assume his position at UB July 15. The Profespresident. It is up to each of us
sorship was recently vacated by
to seek a true evaluation of the Lt. Colonel Huddleston, who has
man which will only come from been Professor of Aerospace Studa true evaluation of his strengths ies for four years. Lt. Colonel
Ozeniek temporarily holds the
and weaknesses as a president.

nedy three years ago, our best

thirty-fifth president.
Compounding the problems created by this barrage of information are the emotional stimuli of
Kennedy records, Kennedy movies, Kennedy half-dollars, Kennedy key chains and Kennedy
Savings Bonds. (What could be
more touching than having a picture of the late president on the
bond we receive after patriotically contributing to the payroll
savings plans?) These are sophisticated in comparison to the nickledime trash and pathetic monuments erected adjacent to the
flickering “Jenny” signs.
There is more, but is it necessary to continue? A mere suggestions is enough for all of us
to recall the preoccupation of
our society with the creation of
a myth about John F. Kennedy,
his family and his life.
Thus, we are presented with a

Herbert to Assume
ROTC Professorship
Effective July IS

position.

ical myth and historical reality.
Great national figures are always
given a grandoise role in the culture of a society and unfortunately it is this glorification that
makes the job of separating myth
from reality sometimes impossible
for the historical analyst. The
American treatment of John F.
Kennedy and his administration
seems destined to bring about
this problem.

senting a thousand pages of the
late president’s wit, virtue and

resolution. The tribute, honor and
glory becomes almost bombastic
as John F. Kennedy becomes a
full fledged member of the Brotherhood of American Heroes.

Inidvidually, wo must build our
respect of John F. Kennedy on
truth, not on what is handed to
to us by an emotionally oriented
society. I'm sure he would have

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT fit SMITH PRINTING

MORE AVE. (mt Delaware)
Phone 876-2284

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wanted it that way.

One of the most disheartening
developments in our attempt at
an honest evaluation is the book
by Arthur Schlesinger, A Thousand Days, John F. Kennedy in
the White House. Schlesinger, already a noted historian and Washington commentator, abandoned
all standards of criticism by prc-

GEORGE WEIN presents

The Newport Festivals
The Newport Jazz Festival
July 1,2, 3, 4, 1966
Four evening concerts; Friday, Saturday. Sunday. Monday. Three afternoon
concerts; Saturday. Sunday. Monday. Featuring; Count Basie. Ruby Braff,
Dave Brubeck. John Coltrane. Miles Davis. Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald.
Bud Freeman. Stan Getz. Dizzy Gillespie. Woody Herman, Herbie Mann,
Thelonious Monk. Jimmy Smith. Joe Williams, and many others
Evenings; $3.50. 4.50. 5.50 Afternoons: $3.00

The Newport Opera Festival
July 12, 13,14, 15, 16, 1966
Presenting the Metropolitan Opera Company of New York. Major stars.
Chorus, and Orchestra in four operas in concert performance and five
afternoons of musical workshops, panels, and lectures.
Tuesday. LA BOHEME
Wednesday. CARMEN
Thursday, (rain dale)
Friday. LUCIA Dl LAMMERMOOR
Saturday. AIDA
(Sunday, rain date)
Evenings: $3.50. 5.50. 7.50
Afternoons: $2.00

The Newport Folk Festival
July 21. 22, 23, 24, 1966
evening concerts: Thursday. Friday. Saturday. Sunday. Three All-Day
Workshops; Friday, Saturday, Sunday.
Featuring; Theo Bikel. Oscar Brand. Brownie McGee and Sonny Terry. Judy
Collins. Bob Dylan. Jack Elliott. Mimi and Dick Farina, Flatt and Scruggs.
Carolyn Hester, Bessie Jones. Phil Ochs. The Pennywhistlers. Jean Ritcbie,
Grant Rogers. Buffy Sainte-Marie. Howling Wolf, and others
Evenings; $3.50, 4.50. 5.50
All Day Workshops: $2.00

Four

SPECIAL DISCOUNT: deduct 20% from the list price of tickets for all
concerts if purchased by mail before May 15th.
For information,

write Newport Jazz. Opera, or Folk Festival. For tickets
specify dates and Festival. Make checks payable to the specific festival you
to attend.
For accommodations, write the Newport Chamber of Commerce. Newport,
Rhode Island 02840.
plan

If you're age 12 through 21, you can fly to the Newport
fare on American Airlines, creator of the American
Providence. R. I. To become eligible, just send $3.00 with
and receive your Youth Plan ID. plus a free copy of AA's
with $50 worth of discount coupons

American Airlines Youth

Everybody's doing it. Operation Match. It's camp

to meet. It whammo's blind dates.
It started at Harvard. The original Operation Match—featured in TIME, LOOK,
and the coming May GLAMOUR. Already there are over 100,000 ideal dates in
our computer's memory bank. Now's the time to line up your Spring Fling.
Let our IBM 7090 Computer (the world's most perfect boy/girl matcher) select
5 ideal dates for you—right from your campus area. (Now a gal can really choose
the kind of guy she wants, not just wait and hope he comes along!)
Just send us the coupon below ... we ll send you the Operation Match Quan
titative Personality Projection Test Questionnaire.
Answer the questions about yourself, what you're like, and what you like. Return
the questionnaire with S3.00. Then we put our 7090 s memory bank to work. It
reads out the qualifications of every member of the opposite sex in your college
area, and programs 5 or more ideal dates for you You receive names, addresses,
and phone numbers. Guys call the gals. You're just a telephone apart.
Also, your card is kept continuously active. You receive as many dates as the
7090 finds matches. The sooner you apply, the more dates you may get.
Let the 7090 take the blinds off blind dating. Get modern. Get electronic. Get
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Tuesday,, April 26, 1966

SPECTRUM

The Birthday Party' to Be Shown
In Baird Hall This Week
Harold Pinter’s famous

Barbara Thirtle and William Cortes in a scene from Harold Pinter's
"The Birthday Party."

‘‘com-

edy of menace” The Birthday
Party, -will be presented by UB’s
Department of Speech and Drama
in Baird Hall Wednesday through
Saturday evenings (April 27-30)
at 8:30. The play, the first to
bring recognition to the brilliant
young English playwright, deals
with an apparently normal situation in an English resort town
which is soon disrupted by the
arrival of two ambiguous strangt-rs on an unspecified mission.
The mission turns out to be the
destruction of the only resident

a run-down boarding house,
and the play presents this destruction in both its comic and
its grotesque aspects.
in

The UB production is directed
by Ward Williamson of the drama
faculty, and is performed by a
cast consisting of Charles Sherry,
Helene Friedman,
Barbara Thirtle,
son, and Robert
may be obtained
ticket office or

William Cortes,
Frank RichardLittle. Tickets
at the Norton
by calling 831

There will be no edition of the Spectrum on
Friday, April 29. The
next regular edition will
appear on Tuesday, May
3rd.
This Friday is “Moving-Up Day.” There are
no classes scheduled.
—CIVIL RIGHTS—
Students interested in
attending the Intercollegia.te Conference on
Civil Rights and the Law
April 28-30 at Oberlin
College, Ohio, should
contact Jeffrey Lynford
in the Senate office.

3704.

Education Dean Suggests Plan
To End Racial Imbalance
By Use of Education Parks
The use of “educational parks”
housing grammar and secondary
school students from a wide area
was endorsed as a possible antidote for school racial imbalance

by Dr. Robert S. Fisk, Dean of
the School of Education, at a
meeting of the Torch Club last
Thursday.

KLEINHANS
Downtown Buffalo

&amp;pm*t

Thruway Plaza

Dean Fisk said that the parks
with vast campuses would insure
desegregation and “promote a
means for greater administrative
flexibility.”

Boulevard Mall

Aui* (Cnllrur

The “educational parks," Dean
Fisk explained, would provide
large metropolitan areas with an
accumulation of new school facilities at a single large site.

He noted that segregation in
schools must be viewed as a
metropolitan
problem, rather
than a problem of the “core city.”
He cited the need for bringing
disadvantaged children to the
suburbs, for providing appropriate curricular and professional
services, and for insuring professional and technical occupations for the qualified Negro
student.

“At all possible points in the
educational process a dialogue
must be in process. It must' be
one which can gradually contribute to the Negro and white
identification with each other in
the common cause of an integrated - education.”

Original Music Compositions
Featured on WBFO Tonight
Original musical compositions
by graduate assistant William A.
Penn will be presented over
WBFO tonight at 7:30 p.m. Mr.
Penn’s compositions were written to complement seven student paintings previously dis-

cussed in the series.

The program will conclude the

"Talking Painting” series which

is concerned with contemporary
evaluation methods of past and
present works of art.
Art Professor Willard R. Harris and a group of his sophomore
art students discussed pictorial
design in relation to some original works of VanEyck, Ver-

meer, and Caravaggio, last Monday. Students studied the techniques empolyed by the artist in
each painting, and formulated
their own '‘analyses” using similar techniques.

This

contributed

to

student

awareness of the shortcomings

and assets of the artists’ methods
and of their own.
Following their analyses, the
students created their own expressive developments. The techniques and overall effects of the
works of art students Patricia
Doren, Marjorie Weiss and Gary
Sutter were discussed by the
panel.

Travia Moves to Make Sale
Of LSD a Major Felony
Assembly Speaker Anthony

Travia introduced a bill in the
State Legislature April 18 to
make the sale and distribution
of LSD or other hallucinatory-

drugs a felony punishable by a
7-20 year prison term. The bill
is pending in the Rules Committee.

Travia requested a joint legislative committee study of all aspects of LSD and other drugs.
The effects of LSD on human beings, its use, and its distribution
'•'ill be investigated.
"The recent horrifying cases involving the use of LSD in New
York City and disclosures of widespread use in many parts of the

country make immediate action
necessary," Travia commented.
Travia's action follows requests

by the Federal Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) April 5 urging college and university administrators “to take action against a
dangerous increase in the illicit
use by students of the hallucinatory drug LSD.
The FDA received reports that
LSD had been manufactured in
college chemistry laboratories.
FDA commissioner Dr. James L.
Goddard warned of the gravity of
the situation in letters to deans
of men and women, campus housing administrators, and heads of
science departments.

Dean of Students Richard Sig
gelkow has not received a state
ment from the FDA to date.

�To—day, April 26, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACK ILIVIN

Friend Awarded Bancroft Prize
Ordeal of Philippine Relations With
Japan and U.S. Wi.ts History Award
UB History Professor Theodore
Friend was awarded the 1966
Frederic Bancroft Prize for his
Book Between Two Empires: The
Ordeal of the Philippines, last
Thursday.
The Bancroft Prizes honor “the
authors of the best books in

according to the Columbia Uni
versity News Office.
Between Two Empires is the
first study in depth of the Philippines’ relationship with the United States and Japan during the
years 1929-46.

Dr. Friend said that he did
extensive documentary research
and conducted numerous interviews to gather material for the
book.

,f

=?

Zrl

ilk
DR. FRIEND

American history in its broadest
sense, American diplomacy, and
American

international affairs,”

The Bancroft Prizes were established at Columbia by Frederic
Bancroft, historian and former
librarian of the Department of
State. Historian Richard Morris
also received the Bancroft Prize
this year for his book The Peacemakers.
The prizes were awarded at the
annual awards dinner held at
Columbia University last Thursday. The dinner was sponsored
by the Friends of the Columbia
Libraries.

Dr. Friend is currently writing
a monograph entitled The Philippine Polity. He has been awarded a 1966-67 National Defense
Foreign Language Fellowship for
Indonesian Language and Area

What do the weatherwise go for 7 Rainfair’s all purpose coat. Its lining, a muted plaid. Its shell,
permanent press fabric of Fortrel polyester and cotton. Both, byGaleyand Lord A Division of
Burlington Industries. For your nearest retailer, write us at 1407 Broadway, New York 18.

Studies.

Galey

H. G. Wells Centenary Exhibit
An exhibit to commemorate the
centenary of H. G. Wells (18661966) is on view in the library’s
main reading room. Featured in
the display are early first editions and important autograph
letters from Wells to James Joyce.
H. G. Wells is chiefly remembered today as a pioneer in the
field of science fiction. In his
novel. The World Set Free (1914),
he accurately predicted the atomic age and its political problems.
Although his many sociological
novels are considered ephemeral.
Wells was one of the most popular and influential authors of his
day; and what he had to say he
very often said with distinction.
His works have been more generally translated into foreign languages than have those of any
of his contemporaries.
The often quoted, “Human history becomes more and more a

race between education and catastrophe,” first appeared in The
Outline of History (1920).

*

loxi^f

HELP! HELP! \
I'D GIVE ANYTHING TO
SAVE DEAR NICK FROM
GETTING ROUGHED UP
WHILE SHAVING CLOSE!

:

(i\\

SOB-SOB
H. G. WELLS

.Spectrum Cduii J3oard
The Politics Club will meet on
Wednesday, April 27 at 3 p.m.
in Norton 233. Dr. Gataldo and
Dr. Johnson of the Political Science Department will present the
results of a Buffalo Area Survey

conducted last fall in the 39th
Congressional District. Also at

the meeting the club will hold
elections for next year's officers.
The Anthroplology Club will
present Dr. John Kennedy speaking on “Field Work in Nubia”
at 8:30 p.m. on April 28 in
Norton 329,

Grcal

'Flip-Top' Spee
there is for do:

and

c

Dice whiskers o
ip

cleaning,

you get a smoother

d

more, give the Norelc

shoves. 'Floating heads,
All the trimmings-a

fiJore/co
©1964

Sever Trifu discusses "The Black Sea Coast"

Photo by Joseph Feyes

The Close Electric Shave

North Amor.con Phil.pi Company. Inc., 100 Eoi» 42nd $»••■

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PAGE

TWELVfe

Tuesday, April 26, 1966

S PEC T R U M

Education Commission
Advises Government
With relatively little fanfare
the ompact for Education has
grown from a rough idea in the
minds of a few men to a legal
reality. It has all taken just a
little more than a year.
The legal body now in existence
is the. Education Commission of
the States, a permanent organization agreed upon by political and
education leaders from every
slate when they met in Kansas
City last September and formed
the Compact for Education, a
temporary planning organization.
Dr. James B. Conant first discussed the ideas on which the
compact was to be based in his
book, “Shaping Educational
Policy.” Conant criticized the generally low level of state-supported education, while noting
that the U.S. Constitution does
not authorize Congress to set any
sort
education
of “national
policy.”

The commission, if joined by
all of the states, will be a representative body of 370, with
seven delegates from each state
and 20 from the federal government and foundations. The commission will authorize studies in
various areas of education to
“present alternatives to policy
decisions.” In other words, the
commission will be a giant information clearing house.
The commission will also make

recommendations on educational
policy to the various state legislatures and possibly even to the

federal government, but the commission itself will have no policymaking power.
The idea was seized upon by
former North Carolina Gov. Terry
Sanford, who was at Duke University writing a book on the
function of the states. Sanford
developed the draft proposal for
the compact and convened a
group of educators and political
leaders to plan for the Kansas
City meeting.

Ronald Moskowitz, the, commission’s associate director, said that
22 states have joined the commission to date; 30 states are expected to be members by the
group’s first annual meeting in
Chicago in June.
Maine is the only state to have
rejected the commission so far,
and the rejection prompted a
hurried trip by Moskowitz to visit
Maine legislators, Moskowitz said
he feels certain the nevt session
of the Maine legislature will authorize membership in the commission and attributed the rejection this term to “politics and
misunderstanding.”

The commission describes itself
the
the
adand

as a “partnership between
educational leadership and
political leadership for the
vancement of education,”

this has brought caustic remarks
from some sources who suggest
politics should be kept out of
the schools, not brought in.
The chief critics of the commission have been in the ranks of
higher education. One of the
most vocal is Herbert E. Longenecker who wrote in the Winter
1966 issue of The Educational Record that “no logical argument
has been advanced that desired
improvements in education would
result from deliberately bringing
politics into education,”
Critics argue that the representative body
with seven deleis not
gates from each state
large enough to cover all of the
facets of education and that the
commission necessarily will exclude some ideas.
This argument has been particularly prevalent among higher
education critics of the commission. Allan W. Ostar, the executive director of the Association of
State Colleges and Universities,
told a meeting of the Education
Writers Association in February
that it would be very difficult to
“represent” education with only
seven delegates from a state, all
of whom are to be named by the
—

—

governor.

President Elvis Stahr, Jr., of
Indiana University, made a presentation at the Kansas City
meeting on behalf ow the National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges in which he suggested that
higher education either be left
out of the scope of the commission entirely or that a separate
representative body be included
for it.

SDS...

(Cont’d from P. 1)
Selective Service examination “because they don’t want to go to
Vietnam.” The results from the
tests will be used by local draft
boards to help determine college
deferments.

Chief among the material SDS
hopes to distribute at all of the

test sites is a two-page “examin-

ation” on the war in Vietnam. The
leaflet will contain factual questions about the war; answers will
be included at the bottom of the
second page, Booth said.
Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach had told a Chicago news
conference last October that SDS
was among groups figuring in a
Justice Department investigation
into the anti-draft movement. The
SDS role had been strictly legal
“counseling and giving information on conscientious objection,” Booth asserted.
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c

T* U M

PAGE THIRTEEN

Naval Academy Reputation Suffers
From Unequal Grading Practices
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (CPS)
The
academic reputation of the UnitNaval
Academy sufed States
fered two blows in as many days
when it became known that a
blue-ribbon accrediting team from
the Middle Atlantic Association
of Colleges and Secondary Schools
plans to recommend the academy
upgrade its academic program by

This effect, the study said, “is
well recognized among seniors
since they realize that the financial investment and pay of each
midshipman is a deterrent To
their dismissal except for serious
doubt as to their future potential
as Naval officers.”

de-emphasizing military and ath-

of this would be necessary if the
school relaxed some of its military and athletic requirements
and gave students more time for
studies. As he put it, “all of that
malarky stands in the way of a
vastly improved academic program.”
Just as sources at the academy
were fuming over the prospect
of the commission’s report, Kent
Ponder, an assistant professor of
Spanish, said his contract was not
being renewed for the fall because he had refused to engage

—

letic activities and then when a
professor charged his contract
is not being renewed because he
refused to participate in gradefixing activities.
The academy’s grading practices were at the heart of both
disputes.

A. Bernard Drought, the academic dean, acknowledged to the
accrediting commission that the
academy has an official policy of
limiting the number of students
permitted to fail their courses,
regardless of grades.
The dean said he initiated the
policy shortly after he came to
Annapolis in 1963. He said the
action was prompted by an increase in failures when the school
changed to a letter grade system from numerical grades and
the desire to keep at “attrition
rate’’ at a steady 35 per cent “as
it has been for the past 10 years."
The commissions also cited a
288-page self-study by the academy and dated Feb. 1, 1966. The
study was prepared for the use
of the commission and covers
every aspect of the academy’s
program. It was signed by Rear
Adm. D. L. Kauffman, the academy’s superintendent.
The study said “it is a matter
of great concern to many of the
faculty that the practical necessity of graduating reasonable

One source close to the accrediting team suggested that none

Retiring President Furnas receives World Tour Gift at Testimonial Dinner last week.

Photo by Univerrity Relations

in grade-fixing.

Ponder said that a midshipman
whose father is a high-ranking
Naval officer was allowed to pass

a first-year Spanish course even
though the youth only scored 16
per cent on the final written ex-

amination.
The head of the academy’s foreign languages department, Capt.
Robert S. Hayes, derHied that

there is any connection between
the decision to let Ponder’s contract expire and the question of

grade adjustments.
As early as September, Hayes
said, his civilian faculty aides had
“begun to question the caliber of
Ponder’s performances.”
Ponder said that Hayes, and
even Superintendent Kauffman,
were involved in efforts to get
him to pass the midshipman. Ponder said he was called into Kauffman’s office where the superintendent, who stressed he was
acting as a “friend of the boy’s

numbers of Naval officers each
if not impossible, to base grade distribution solely on scholastic compefather,” asked Ponder to give the
tence.”
boy “extra help’’ so he could pass.
The self-study said there is “undeniable evidence of ‘coasting’ Ponder said he replied that the
on the part of significant num- “•boy was receiving extra instruction but his chance of passing
bers of middle-C average midshipwas slim.
men who have learned to make
Ponder said the boy’s grade was
the minimum effort and pass succhanged after he had given it.
cessfully.’
year makes it difficult,

Residence Halls Present Awards
For Their Outstanding Students
The four women’s residence
halls issued Outstanding Student
Awards. The Carolyn Tripp Clement Hall Award was given to
Elissa Boekino and the Walter
P. Cooke Hall Award to Jarina
Markowski. The Ella Conger
Goodyear Hall East Wing Award
was presented to Rosemary Antonuzzo and Carol Waschler.
Lynn Bergstein received the
award for the South Wing and
Judith Snyder received the Jacob
E. Sehoellkopf Hall Award.
Senior women cited for having
attained a 2.5 cumulative average

for seven semesters were: Susan
Adler, Sandra Atlas, Arline Engel, Marjorie Linhardt, Frances
Marfurt, Ruth Munk, Donna Thurston, Susan Weinstein and Laura
Zimmerman.
Sandra Froach received the
Women's Recreation Association
Leadership Award.

Judie Meahl, Jan Whalen, Patricia Bell, Nancy Master and
Carol Sack were introduced as
the newly-elected officers of
Lamda Kappa Sigma.

Sherker Fund Established
For Innovation And Grants
The David and Rebecca Skerker
Fund, a $15,000 dual-purpose
Slant for scholarships and unprojects,
restricted innovation
has been established through the
University of Buffalo Foundation,
Inc,

The fund was established by
Mr. Bernard B. Skerker, secretary-treasurer of the Robinson
Knife Company, and members of
his family. Scholarships of $500
''■'ill be awarded annually to any
ualified son or daughter of a
obinson Knife Company cmoyee, or, if none qualifies, the
mds will be made available to
1 under-privileged and acadcmi-

cally qualified person in Western
Mr. Skerker said.

Nothing
can take the press out of Lee-Prest slacks
Not

at it

t Lee

u

ays

New York,

The Skerker Fund provides for
an additional $200 to encourage
innovation projects by faculty
and Students. The monies will
be administered by the Foundation Board of Trustees.

“In

Fund,

establishing the Skerker
we consider it a chal-

lenge grant for the UB Foundation, in hopes that other a umm
frieds and corporate executive
in the region served by UB will

establish additional
funds-scholarships,”

dual-purpose

Lee

The

ade

Inci

Lee-Prest I
essar

but

LGGPReST LGGSUIGS

,

�Tuesday, April 26,' 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

oCetterA

to

Weekly Calendar

the Editor

Varsity Tennis: UB vs. Rochester.

Student Suffers Water Balloon Assault
TO THE EDITOR;

Last Saturday while walking
past Tower Hall I had the misfortune to be struck by a water
balloon dropped by some jackass
in residence. This missile smashed
my glasses, cut my face, and
drenched my clothes.
Aside from the expense incurred through this display of
pre school mentality on the part
of the animals in Tower, I have
been forced to suffer the hard

ships of near blindness, headaches, fatigue and much inconvenience. In addition, I could
have lost my sight permanently
as a consequence of this assinine

behavior
Fortunately, I was lucky and
suffered only minor damage. However, I am told that this is a

normal diversion with which the
juveniles of Tower entertain
themselves. It is difficult for one
to believe that the Tower BOYS
need babysitters, but in view of

the incident I am lead to suspect
that they do
I have reported this incident to
the University authorities and
now bring it to the attention of

the students. I consider the incident an assault and feel that the
assailant should be dealt with accordingly, In the least he should
be expelled from the University
and I am at present also considering legal action.

Hable Vd. espanol? Parlez-vous
francais? Sprechen Sie Doutsch?
Then why not come to the language tables? No one expects a
native accent, perfect grammar,
or an extensive vocabulary. Nor
can anyone criticize a person (or
trying to increase his fluency in
a foreign tongue, no matter how
many mistakes he makes. So, why
has there been such a lack of
student participation to date in
the language tables?
For (he past three weeks, at
5:30 p m. on Tuesdays and Wednesdays in Tower's small dining
room, native speakers and pro-

fessors of the Dept, of Modern
Languages have been willing to
give their time to encourage in
formal conversations with students in German, French, or Spanish. Until now, extremely few students have shown enough interest
to join the language tables. This
1 cannot understand.

In a university as large as ours,
and especially with one of the
basic distribution requirements
for University College stating
that a student must have at least
one year of language study be-

yond that acquired in high school,
there is a vast number of students
who arc technically qualified to
speak a foreign language. So, why
the Apathy?
Why have students suddenly
become so shy that they do not
approach the language tables at
all? The University of Buffalo
has often been criticized as being
too big; a college in which the
students are known only by Ihcir
student numbers as mere lists of
statistics. The language tables
provide the student with the opportunity to become better
acquainted with his professor, to
become an individual personality
to that instructor. Yet, how few
students take advantage of that
opportunity!
Perhaps lack of student participation is due to lack of publicity. I have been told that students dining in Goodyear are informed of the language tables
during dinner by a loudspeaker
announcement. But what good
does such publicity do after the
students have been through the
cafeteria lines? Why not make
such announcements during
lunch, when they might be more
effective?

Stunt Night: Sponsored by
Union Board, 7 to 11 p.m., Conference Theatre.

I have yet to hear one such announcement over the PA system
at Norton Union, where many
commuters congregate. Yet, certainly the language tables are, or
should be, equally as important
as any other extra-curricular activity or club here at the University.

As a commuter, I am concerned over the obvious neglect
to inform my fellow commuters
of such a program. 1 have talked
with several commuters who expressed an interest in the language tables, but who hadn't
known of their existence. True,
the Spectrum did print one article,
but when I spoke to various members of the Spectrum staff about
the language tables, they apparently had never heard of
them.
To join

the language tables,
should contact their

residents
RA’s, and commuters may purchase a meal ticket in the cafeteria line for $1.65. The responsibility for the maintenance of the
language tables rests with the
student body: Let’s make them as
successful as they were last year!

It is not strange that man has
divided education into separate,,
disunified divisions of study when
it is but an exploration and supplementation of one's mind.’ Intellectual curiosity can not be
thusly confined.
It is necessary to enter an ex

elusive, expensive institution to
gain knowledge, and even there,
in the silence, education is not.
Communication is an important
part of education. Silence is silly
if one can learn from another
what he seeks from books. But

alas! The nation is populous;
there is war, and if one is to
save his skin he must enter the
university, not to learn, but to
live. Non student-students litter
the campus and it becomes necessary to instigate rules of silence
so that no one will be disturbed
as he memorizes usual answers
to usual questions. The sHencc
stifles the student, who is selfexpressive
But outside the university, in
the workaday world, which is

time to meet learned educators,
nor docs he have time to die in
worthless war; time is of the essence. Thus the student finds
himself imprisoned in the university. There arc cells in which
to live, schedules to follow (studying

specific

topics at

specific

times, and making specific enccphalonte connections; less new
ones be made) assuring completion of specific syllabi), and a
clock to watch (when will it be
time to

the true institution of learning,
into which the student may venture, one does not meet or have

hall program
plays an important part in the
overall development of the individual and represents an in
tegral part of the total educational process of the university.
The major purpose of the Residence Hall program is academic
in nature—to help prepare each
student for the classroom . . . and
encourage integrity and intellectual curiosity necessary to the
achievement of educational goals.
"The residence

Activities, programs, and coun
seling services are planned and
carried out , . for the purpose
of teaching individuals how to

live happily and comfortably with
in groups, an important lesson in
a democratic society,

“(These halls) provide on-cam
pus facilities from which the stu
dent can receive social, educational, and cultural advantages."

This quotation from the UB Bulletin 1956-66 indicated the im

parlance which the administration
supposedly places on dormitory
life. As a transfer student, I feel
that I deserve the opportunity to
enjoy the "social, educational, and
cultural advantages" which the
catalogue mentions. It seems to
me that all students should have
an equal opportunity to be ad-

mitted into the dorms. This, however, is not the case. ,Mcn transfer students are not given any
consideration and are neglected
by the university in regard to oncampus housing facilities. The administration has taken up a policy of "discrimination against this
small group of students. By not
allowing the transfer student the

equal opportunity to be admitted
into the dorms, t to administration is denying this student a
basic "right" afforded to even

freshmen.
After speaking to the Dean of
University College, the Dean of

Men, the Dean of Students, and
the Director of Housing, I have

Sponsored by

Union Board, 7 p.m., Fillmore
Room.
Foster Lecture:

Department of

Foster Lecture: Department of
Chemistry, 4:15 p.m., 70 Acheson

Friday 29

Hall.

Hall.

Spring Weekend Ball; Hearthstone Manor, 9 p.m.

Meeting; Free University of
Buffalo, 7:30 to 10 p.m., Norton

Varsity Baseball: UB vs Gene
seo State.

Wednesday 27

Symposium: Buffalo Studies in
Psychotherapy, 9 a.m., Acheson

Theatre: The Birthday Party by
Harold Pinter, 8:30 p.m., Baird
Hall, through Saturday,

Poetry Reading: Charles Abbott
Reading Fund, 4 p.m., Diefendorf

264.

Election: Spring Weekend
4 p.m., Center Lounge.
Jules Fciffer, 8:30
p.m., Conference Theatre.

Queen, 9 to
Lecture:

Lecture; Department of Psychology, 4 to 5 p.m., Norton 234.

Foster Lecture: Department of
Chemistry, 4:15 p.m„ 70 Acheson

Hall.

Hall.
Concert: Ramsey Lewis Trio in
Concert, 8:15, Kleinhans Music
Hall, tickets: $2.50, $3, $3.50, $4,
may’ be obtained at the Rosary
Hil Main Desk, Mon.-Fri.: 11:301:30, or by sending a stamped,
self-addressed envelope to Rosary
Hill College Concert, 4380 Main
Street,

Hall.

Buffalo Area Survey Results
To Be Presented Wednesday
Drs. Catlada and Johnson of
the Political Science Department
will present the results of the
Buffalo Area Survey at a meet-

ing of the Politics Club Wednesday, April 27 at 3 p.m. in Room
233 Norton.
The survey was conducted last
fall in the 39th Congressional
district by Cataldo and Johnson. Students in last semester’s
Political Science 201 class who
served as interviewers for the
project will now have the op-

portunity to hear the results of

their work.
The Politics Club will also hold
elections for next year’s officers
at its Wednesday meeting. Composed of political science majors
and other interested students,
the club has had meetings with
faculty members and has sponsored speakers. Dr. Johnson is
the faculty advisor. President
Paul Fisk has invited all interested students to attend the meeting.

Marie Doring

talk?).

Joyce Smith

Transfer Student Discriminated Against in Dorms
TO THE EDITOR

Thursday 28
Stunt Night:

Chemistry, 4:15 p.m., 70 Acheson

CLASSIFIED

Intellectual Imprisonment Scored
TO THE EDITOR

Martin, Baird Hall,

3 p.m.

Lecture: Professor R, Marshall,
“Industrial Relations,” 2 p.m.,
Norton 234.

Tobie Anderson

Conversation Lacking at Language Tables
TO THE EDITOR

Recital; Mr.

Tuesday 26

neither been given the equal opportunity to be admitted into the
dorms no have I received a satisfactory explanation of why 1 have
not been granted this opportunity. All these men agree with
my position and completely sympathize with my situation, but
they all claim that is out of their
jurisdiction and they can do nothing about it. I am fairly certain,
however, that if a transfer student was a varsity football player
who wanted dorm accommodations. these same men (who say
that it is out of their jurisdiction
and can do nothing) would be
able to provide him with a room
with little effort.

I contend that the transfer student is an important part of the
student body and should have
the same opportunity as any other
student. This serious situation can
and should be immediately remedied

Donald Levine,
Transfer Class of '68

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hf SPECTRUM

-

PAM PIFTIIN

Competition to Begi
To Study or Resea
The competitions for the 196768 United States Government
graduate grants for academic
study or research abroad, and
for professional training in the
creative and performing arts, will
open officially on May 1st, the
Institute of International Education (HE) announced.

HE conducts competitions for
U.S.
Government scholarships
provided by the Fulbright-Hays
Act as part of the educational
and cultural exchange program
of the U.S. Department of State.
Under this program, more than
850 American graduate students
will have the opportunity to study
in any one of 53 countries. The
purpose of the awards is to increase mutual understanding between the people of the U.S. and
other countries through the exchange of persons, knowledge and
skills.
Candidates who wish to apply
for an award must be U.S. citizens at the time of application,
have a bachelor’s degree or its
equivalent by the beginning date
of the grant and, in most cases,
be proficient in the language of
the host country. Selections will
be made on the basis of academic
record, the
and/or professional
feasibility of the applicant’s proposed study plan and personal
qualifications. Preference will be
given to candidates who have
not had prior opportunity for
extended study or residence abroad and who are under the
age of 35.

lence:

Creative and performing artists
will not be required to have a
bachelor’s degree but they must
have four years of professional
study or equivalent experience.
Applicants in social work must

have at least two years of professional experience after the
Master of Social Work degree.
Applicants in the field of medicine must have an M.D. at the
time of application.
Two types of grants will be
available through IIE under the
Fulbright-Hays Act; U.S. Government Full Grants, and U.S. Government Travel Grants.

A full award will provide a
grantee with tuition, maintenance,
round-trip transportation, health
and accident insurance and an
incidental allowance. In Ceylon,
p
°;
t
the Republic oI
land, Portugal,
China, and Turkey, a maintenance allowance will be provided
for one or more accompanying

«r. rr rr

Richard Farina, author of "Been
Down So Long it Looks Like Up
to Me" to be published by Random House on April 28, and his
wife Mimi, both of whomcan also

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■

-Ref ■•ctions in a Crystal Wind."
photo

by Daniel Kramer

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schol-

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informed on the American political and social scene. These grants
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a year of course work in a university in the American Republics area. The grants are not intended to support doctoral dis-

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Tuesday, April 26,

¥

rz

1+66

s

—ifHardballers Crush State TRACK TEAM
BOWS TWICE
Twice, Bow to Colgate
By RICH

f=-

BAUMGARTEN

The UB baseball team ran its
record to 5-0 as the Bulls defeated rival Buffalo State twice
by scores of 5-0 and 13-1. The
Bulls combined the good pitching of Don Potwora and Tim
Uraskevitch with a 20-hit performance as Coach Peelle’s boys
ruined State’s opener on the
Orangemen’s new diamond.
In the first game UB scored
five times in the first inning, and
State was a beaten team. Con-

/h==A

-

gate attack with three safeties,
while John Allen threw a fourhitter. The Bulls, who had made
only one error in their previous

five games, contributed to their

own downfall with five miscues
against the Red Raiders. Three
of the errors came in a three-run
third inning for the hosts.
UB’s lone tally came in the
eighth inning when Rutkowski
doubled and came home on a wild
pickoff throw by Rav Ilg.
BASEBALL NOTES—UB is now
5-1, Colgate 9-4.
The Bulls play
Canisius at home this afternoon
at 3 p.m.
Wednesday they travel to Syracuse before returning
home against Geneseo on Friday.
Hansen is the team’s leading hitter with a mark over .500,
Uraskevitch leads the team in
strikeouts with 21 in 13 innings,
while Rutkowski has whiffed 15
in seven frames.
Rutkowski
leads the team in doubles with
—

—

%
,

-y

—

—

—

It appears that the UB track

UB Netmen

Capture 5
In a Row

The UB tennis team extended
its unbeaten skein to five by
drubbing Niagara. 9-0 on Friday,

after rallying to nip Buffalo State
on Wednesday, 5-4. Both matches
were played on the UB courts.

In Wednesday's contest the
Orangemen copped the first three
singles matches, but Coach Bill
Sanford’s Bulls rallied gamely
to take the last three singles

—

five.
Pinch-hitter John Grad is
batting 1.000 with three hits in
three appearances.
WBFO will
continue to broadcast all UB
—

team can do nothing but improve
this season. At least judging by
the margin of defeat in their
first two meets, it seems almost
a mathematical impossibility that
they can fare any worse.

Last Wednesday the
team
opened its season by visiting always tough Colgate. After three
events Coach Emery Fisher was
seen getting a head start on the
weekend’s time change by setting
his watch a hour ahead in an
attempt to hurry the proceedings
along. 'But even the coach’s attempts could not hold the score
down. After the dust had settled,
UB found itself on the short
end of a 129-18 margin.
The only consolation the Varsity could have gotten was from
the UB-Colgate Freshman score.
The final tally showed UB bowing
by an even more incredible margin of 138-8.

—

Two lied Raider spectators were
overheard during the contest. The
first boy, pointing to a
white uniform bringing up the
rear in the 220, said, “These were
the state champs two years ago.”

home games.
BUFFALO

BUFFALO STATE

ah r h hi
r h bl
0 0ft Aurzeia 3b
I 0 0 ft
BuchM 1b
a ft I ft Traplprl, 1b 1 0 ft 0
1 ft ft ft
Rutknwski Cf I 1 ft ft AAO'.ci'P ?h
10 10
Oprnnqpr If 3 ft ft ft Graham rf
? ft ft ft
4 12 0 Bettchar Ih
DuPrpy c
Hansen rf
3 12 1 MacLfftd rf 1 ft ft ft
3 111 Carlson ss
2 3 ft
Long ?b
Pmalaricf
1 ft ft ft
3 1 1 7 Juliana ss
Shaw lb
3 0 10 Aipfanfi* cf 2 ft 0 0
p
Potwora
3 0 0 0 Sawlrki
1 0 1 0
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2 0 0 0
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2 0 0 0
15 0 4 0
totals
Tof*l»
SO I I 4
Buffalo
MO 000 00-5
State
000 000 0-0
E—Carlson LOB—Buffalo 4. Sfala J.
3B-Pu55ter
IP H DIR BB SO
Polwor*
7 4 0 0 0 9
Hlggtni
7 4 5 0 0
l.eijrr 5%

ah
3

After squinting at his friend
with a are-you-kidding
me-orwhat look, the second quipped,
“The Yankees were doing pretty
well aroun dthe ntoo, weren’t

&lt;&gt;

DON POTWORA

secutive singles by Jim Duprey,
Brian Hansen and Doug Dong, a
State error and Bob Pusatcri’s
boominb triple featured UB's big
inning. Potwora pitched his second line game of the season,
this time going the route on a
four-hit shutout, striking out
nine and walking none, while
State's losing pitcher Don Higgins
—except for UB’s five-run uprising—pitched good ball.
In the nightcap, the UB hitting
attack exploded for 13 runs on
12 hits as the Bulls muled State
behind the five-hit pitching of
hard-throwing Tim Uraskevitch.
Uraskevitch. throwing the “hummer." struck out 13 State bats
men. whilt walking only two.
Rich Carlson
accounted
for
State's only run of the afternoon with a second inning homerun, while Brian Hansen, Ron
Leiser and Ken Rutkowski each
had two hits for UB.
At Colgate Saturday, the Hod
Raiders topped the Bulls, 6-1.
Paul Bradley paced a 14-hit Col-

Ordinarily the game is played
on a Saturday afternoon. How-

ever. in view of the

great interest
this year in UB football and the
new coach, Doc Uriel), it was
decided to hold the game on a
Friday night so that more people
could see it.

UB
Athletic Director Jim
Peelle, in announcing the game,
expressed his appreciation to Dr.
William E. Keller. Superintendent of Schools in Williamsville.
for his support of UB athletics

they?”

COACH SANFORD
aUFFALO

COLGATE

Leiser $s
Buchla 3b

Bradley si
SaHler If
Wilson lb

•brhbl
40 0 0
4 0 10
Rutkowskicf 5 12 0
Duprey c
2000
Hansen rf
200 0
4 00 0
Long 2b
Pusaterl If
30 0 0
Shaw lb
3 00 0
Uraskevich p I 0 0 0
Potwora p
10 0 0
Hofheins p
00 00
Grad ph
Bush pr

llqc

Ciesluk cf

3b
Cipolla rf
DoWindl 2b
Allen p
Ryan

abrhbl
4 13 0
5 0 12
4 110
4120
5 02 0
4 12 0
4 0 10
4 111
4 110

10 10
0 0 0 0

Totals
SO 1 4 0
31 4 14 3
Totals
UB
ooo 000 010-1
Colgate
003 020 10x-4
E-Leiser 2, Pusateri, Shaw, Uraskevich, Wilson, llg, Allen. DP-UB 2,
Colgate 1. LOB-UB 11, Colgate 14.
2B -Rutkowski, Wilson. SB-Bradley 2.
BB
IP H R ER
SO
Uraskevich (1,1-1) . 3 6
1
4 2
3
Potwora
4 6
3
2
1 3
Holheins
1
2 0 0
1 0
Allen (W)
9
4
1 0 4 9
PB -Duprey.

Second Game
203 311 3— 13 12 0
State
010 000 0— 1
5 3
Uraskcvilch and Duprey ■; Phelps,
Kraczyk.
Shields (4) and

bouts, two of the three doubles
matches and the 5-4 verdict.
After their narrow escape against
the Statesmen, UB breezed to a
9-0 triumph against the Purple
Eagles from Niagara two days
later. All team members contributed handy victories in the onesided win.
Rain washed out Saturday's
match against St. Bonaventure.
The netrnen return to action
against invading Rochester this
afternoon. Wednesday the team
will travel to Hobart, and Friday
the squad will visit powerful
Syracuse.

UB

Varsity-Alumni Game

The annual game between the
UB football team and the UB
Alumni, which traditionally conclude spring practice for the
Bulls, will be played on Friday.
May 6, at 8:00 p.m. at the Williamsville High School field.

-

and his assistance in obtaining
the game site for UB.
The Western
School Coaches’
operating with
Department in

New York High
Association is cothe UB 1 Athletic
the game.

UB students and high school
students will be admitted free.
The general public will
be
charged $1, with proceeds going
to the UB Scholarship Fund
which helps pay the way of
needy, deserving students through
college.

The UB Alumni will be
coached in the game by UB
freshman coach Mike Stock. He
will have as his aides former
UB players Jim McNally, Craig
Helenbrook and Joe Garofalo.

Wallack Wins
Sports Trivia
The winner to last Tuesday’s
trivia quiz was David Wallack,
a medical student who correctly
answered all ten questions. In
the closest contest of the year,
David's entry was the only one
w;ith ten cdrrcct answers. There
were several contestants who had
eight and nine correct answers.
The deadline for last Friday's
quiz has been extended until this
Friday. 'Prize-winners of and answers to this contest will be

published in next Friday’s paper,
along with the Spectrum's final

trivia of the

year.

Tuesday's Answers:
1. Charlie Neal, 2. Tom Morgan. 3. Nat, 4. Harry Walker,
5. Hill Gall, 6. Lew Worsham,
7. Frank Baumann, 8. 97, 9. Robert Zuppkek 10. Carin Cone.

The next stop for the UB thinclads was at Brockport Saturday.
The improvement trend was apparently in effect already as the
Bull chopped 37 points off their
losing margin at Colgate to bow
an enheartening 102-38 count.

winners in this meet as Dick
Genau won the two-mile run and
Larry Naukam took a blue ribbon
in the 120 high hurdles.
But if the Varsity improvement
was noteworthy, the Freshman
progress was truly esnsational.
After the 130-point demolition
at Hamilton, the Baby Bulls
came within 30 points of Brock-

port, 76-46. Art Walker almost
carried the team single-handedly
with firsts in the high jump,
triple jump and discus and a
second in the long jump.
The team entertains Canisius
this afternoon and Cortland on
Friday. Next Monday the cindermen will travel to Syracuse for
the LeMoyne Relays.
Brockport 102

•

UB 38

IN—Hal Rothman IBM) 0:0M. DtRothman (Bht) :tl.3. 4*1-John 1 1 to (Bkt)
;S1J. MO— Ron White (Bkt) 1:04. MllaGary Wejtertleld (Bkt) 4:33.0. Twa mlhDick Genau (UB) 10:00.1. 440 Intarmadial* hurdlas-Dick Kennedy (Bkt) 1:02.f.
120 high hurdles—Larry Naukam (UB)
440 relay-Brockport :43.8, High
lump-Bill Wood (Bkt) 5-«. Pole vaultFred Natarelli (Bkt) 11-6. Discus-Jay
Kearny (Bkt) 135.6 Shot-Kearny 47-OV*.
Javelin-Joe Abel (Bkt) 153.9.

Correction: The Grad-

uate Faculty Committee
-

on the Selective Service
is n o t demanding that
President Furnas abolish
the II-S deferment. It has
requested that Dr. Furnas not lend the facilities of UB to the Selective Service for the administration of the draft
deferment test in May
and June.

The Bulls even had first-place

Five Southern Colleges
Warned of Racial Policies

WASHINGTON (CPS)
In its
first crackdown on higher education facilities, the Office of Education this week warned five
Colleges,
including
Southern
Sweet Briar in Lynchburg, Va„
that they may lose federal aid
because of their racial policies.
The colleges were cited for failing to file, or for filing unacceptable assurances of compliance
with the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
which prohibits federal assistance
to programs that discriminate on
the basis of race, color, or nation—

al origin.

Sweet Briar, a well-known womens college, submitted its form
last June, a week-and-a-half after
a Virginia Circuit Court Judge
denied the school's bid for permission to ignore stipulations in
the will of its founder; The will
states that the college, which was

founded in 1900, be for “white

girls and young women.”
A spokesman at the college
said this week that she did not
know if a new hearing now will
be requested by school officials.
She did indicate, however, that
if another hearing is convened,
the school's attorneys might use

another section of the will in seeking to overturn the all-white restriction. The second clause
states, in part, that the school
should “impart to its students
such an education
as shall
in the judgment of the directors
...

best fit them to be useful members of society.”
The college could contend, the
spokesman said, that the directors of the school felt Sweet Briar must desegregate in order to
achieve this goal.
The college so far has received
$64,564 in federal funds; it has
applied for $14,331 for the current fiscal year
The four other colleges warned
were Marion Institute, Marion,
Ala.; Mississippi College, Clinton,
Miss.; Bob Jones University,
Greenville, S.C.; and Freewill
Baptist Bible College, Nashville,
Tenn.
The Office of Education has informed the schools that they can
seek a public hearing on the action.

Another issue involved, the Office of Education said, is the eligibility of the schools to receive
aid for student loans under the
National Defense Education Act.
A related question is wheher the
colleges can make loans from
NDEA funds left over from previous years or retain federal money received by thp school before
the Civil Rights Act was passed.
In another action, the Office of
Education announced that it has
received 687 assurances of compliance with 1966 school desegregation guidelines from school
districts in the 17 Southern and
border states.

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                    <text>ELECTION

iTATE UNIVERSITY OF

YORK AT BUFFALO

SPRING

SPE
Duncan Addresses Overflow Crowd In Norton
DISQUALIFIED

WEEKEND

(See Page 10)

(See Pages 7, 8, 9)

VOLUME 16

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966

By TERRY SEAL

Last Wednesday former Master
Sergeant Donald Duncan, a veteran of ten years army service inincluding six years in the Special
Forces, and eighteen months com-

ditioned us to accept militarism
with litle opposition. He pointed
out the often forgotten fact the
army consists of 3 million voters.
When asked if he felt his out-

spoken views on Vietnam were a
diservice to the country, Duncan
said: “I’m an amateur. But as
long as we have the State Department I don’t have to worry

NO. 41

about my amateur status.” He
mentioned having talked with
Vice-President Humphrey about
the war, saying of Humphrey’s
position: “can you imagine hav-

bat duty in Vietnam, ‘spoke before an overflow crowd of more
than 2500 people in Norton Union. Duncan, whose topic was
the moral and poltical ramifications of the war in Vietnam, proclaimed that this war is the
number one problem in the United States today.

The opening speaker of the
program, Rabbi Daniel Kurman,
initiated the discussion by asserting, “we may win in the battle
statistics and in the headlines,
but we may be defeated in the
hearts of the children.”
Reverend Wright of Welland,
Ontario, mentioned that Canada
is a member of the International
Control Commission. Commenting
on the Vietnam war, he said that
“we have tried to tell you; you
won’t listen.” However, when he
considered the relations between
the two countries, he asked, “how
can we abandon you; you have
so few friends left.”

Mr. Duncan first considered the

military side of the war affirming that the military force is only
a vehicle, “you don’t condemn
the vehicle, “you don't condemn
driver.” The entire society must
share responsibility for the war.
He observed that continual exposure to military thinking since
the end of World War II has con-

Ex-Grean Barat Donald Duncan tpoaki on Vietnam trial* to overflew crowd of 3500
Photo

by Russell Goldberg

Alumni and Friends Honor Furnas at Statler Hilton
By LEE ANN GOLDEN

Alumni and friends of the University in 32 cities across the
nation joined via closed telephone
more than 600 guests at the Statler-Hilton to honor retiring President Clifford C. Furnas last

Tuesday.

“Both town and gown join in
felicitating Furnas,” declared History Department Chairman John
T, Horton during his delivery of
the official testimonial.
Referring to Dr. Furnas as a
prince, Dr. Horton continued by
saying that the 12-year “reign”

shall be remembered “as the most
strenuous and significant years
of our lives.”

Dr. Horton spoke of the retiring administrator as “that luminous personality that has commanded respect and inspired af-

fection.”

Dr. Samuel
of the State
Vork, lauded
who enables

B. Gould, President
University of New
Dr. Furnas as “he
and ennobles by
providing an education which
teaches not only skills but values.”

Keynote speaker Dr. Henry T.

Health, Past

President of the
Ford Foundation, described the
retiring President as an active
Organizing Man” rather than

Whiting’s passive “Organization
Man.”

Dr. Heald further pointed out
that the “Organizing Man is ! a
breaker of molds and set patterns.”
“He has a built-in periscope, a
seeing around corners.
He clings to the long view,” Dr.
Heald added.

man of the Council, presented Dr.
and Mrs. Furnas with plane tickets and a check for a trip to what
the retiring President cal 1 e d
“those faraway places with the
strange-sounding names that
we’ve been longing to see.’’
Dr. Furnas was presented with
a $90,000 check and a patron
list for the Graduate ScholarAthlete Scholarship Fund which
now bears his name. The presenttion was made by Fund Chair-

Baird,

Vice-Chair-

0f

“There is over $90,000 worth
thanks in this envelope," the

The Men’s Glee Club and the
Women's Chorale, under the direction of Robert Beckwith, provided a musical interlude.

.

chairman said,

Another surprise for the Furnases was their daughter Mickey
(Mrs. Carl Pollock), who was
flown in from Denver, Colorado.
Dr. Horton called her “the most
beautiful of the Furnas achievements.”

Head table guests representing
the student body were Student
Association President Clinton Deveaux and Vice President Kim

Harrow.

Toastmaster for the evning was
Seymour H. Knox, President of
the Council.

Vietnamese have the habit of telling a person what they think he
wants to hear. Since the 1800's
they have lived under a succession of foreign governments and
they could not have survived it
they had told the truth, according
to Duncan.
“The people are essentially
apolitical. Their motivation to action is their land, and those with
some education also have a small
amount of nationalism." He pointed that we have created a situation where people are either for
•the Saigon government or for the
Viet Cong; there are no neutralists.
“The main reason that we are
in Vietnam is to roll back the
Communists.” But as the United
States escalates the war, Chinese
influence increases proportionally, added Mr, Duncan. When
asked what course of action the
U.S. should follow in Vietnam,
he responded that the first thing
is to recognize that we are fighting the National Liberation Front,
Hr. Duncan said that he stood
specifically fora dialogue on
these problems and for the people but that he docs not want
to be labeled.
He continued that he does not
want to remove a Saigon dictator
for another dictator, but that he
wants the Vietnamese to decide.
"However, if the Vietnamese decide to embrace the North, then
it is to be their mistake and none
of our concern."
When asked about the small
outcry that the many atrocities
of World War II produced compared to the repercussions of
the Vietnamese atrocities, he said
that the Vietnamese didn't bomb
Pearl Harbor and that we got
our war propaganda before we
got the war instead of the other
way around as in World War II.
"If you want to stop terror and
atrocity, then you stop the war,”
concluded Mr. Duncan.

Student Senate to Review Interim Campus Plans
The Student Senate passed a
proposal to investigate alternatives to the planned interim campus and postponed the voting on
an amendment to its Constitution at a meeting Wednesday
night.
the

The complaint against
planned interim campus, written
by Senator Curtiss Montgomery,
pointed out that students at the
interim campus would not re-

ceive the benefits of interaction
with the entire University community. A petition of the art
students expressing their disapproval of being divorced from
the main campus and of being
moved to the interim campus
was approved by the Senate, An
Ad Hoc Committee was established to investigate alternatives
to the present plans to divide
the student body. This committee will then present its alternative to the proper authorities
for consideration.

talent for

William C

man Whitworth Ferguson,

ing to support that position?”
Mr. Duncan commented on the
picture that most Americans have
of the Vietnamese people: “cowardly and corrupt, lazy and inept,”
emphasizing that this is the same
picture anyone would get of any
country if the only people associated with were politicians and
bargirls. He mentioned that the

Senator Robert Weiner proposed the amendment which requests the Student Activities
Committee to “register any and

all student activities upon eviconstitution and a
faculty advisor.” It is now the
policy of the Student Activities
Committee not to recognize any
group whose goals or idea are
repetitious of a recognized group.
dence of a

support the appeal of the Feinberg Law was approved. Mr. Carl
Levine said he will not sign these

appropriations because of the
question of their legality under
the Constitution.

Opposition to this amendment
was voiced by Senator Brian Joseph and Student Association
Treasurer Carl Levine. Senator
Joseph expressed concern that
undesirable groups would take
advantage of this to become recognized. Mr. Levine commented

this

would

groups to
rooms in

reserve

that

•

allow

small

the available'
Norton, possibly preventing larger groups from using
them.

Justice Richard Jaross
in favor of the amendment asserting, “As democratic
liberals we must uphold the belief in the minority’s right to
speak. We cannot have intellectual stimulation if one group
dictates what can be said.”
Chief

spoke

At the last meeting of the Senate $887.50 for the reprinting of
student ID cards and $800 to

Student Judiciary Chief Justice Rick Jaross debates Student Judiciary
Senate Constitution.

provisions of

�Brydges Announces Formation
Of Joint Legislative Committee
New York State Senate Majority Leader Earl W. Brydges announced last Wednesday that a
new Joint Legislative Committee
on Higher Education will be formed within a month.
Senator Brydges disclosed earlier this month that he will suggest to the Committee that they
conduct an inquiry of demonstrations on State University campuses against the war in Vietnam, and the use of State University at Buffalo press office to
circulate material for one protesting group.
In an interview with the Spectrum, Senator Brydges said, “I
will merely suggest to the committee that they investigate student activities. It will be up to
the committee to decide if they
want to conduct the investigation.” He mentioned that procedure for inquiry will also be determined by the committee, adding
that he will suggest a public
hearing.
Senator Brydges commented,
“we must be concerned with the

Friday; April 21; 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

national situation. People are dying in Vietnam. We are prolonging the war by letting the North
Vietnamese people think we are
not united in our determination.”
When asked to what extent student activities should be controlled, Senator Brydges affirmed,
that he doesn’t think there should
be set restrictions. He added, “I
believe in free speech and I am
not advocating the restriction of
dissent.”
Student Senate President Clinton DeVeaux sent a telegram to
Senator Brydges April 4, inviting
him to an informal discussion
with student leaders “to gain a
clearer understanding of the facts

involved.”
Senator Brydges told the Spectrum that he will not be able to

attend the discussion because the
legislature is now in session, having reconvened April 18. Senator
Brydges added that he would be
willing to discuss the matter with
with UB students in Albany.

CVV Holds Pro-U.S. Rally
The Committee for Victory in
Vietnam (CVV) will stage a “Support —the_US_in_ Vietnam” rally
Saturday, April 23, at 8:00 in
Memorial Auditorium.
Hubert

Vice-President

Hum-

phrey, Secretary of State Dean
Rusk, Senator Everett Dirksen,
Senator Thomas Dodd, NAACP
President Mr. Roy Wilkins, and
National Young Americans for
Freedom President Mr. Thomas
Huston

have

been

invited

to

speak at the rally.

CVV Co-chairmen Steve Sickler
and Frank Klinger said that the
rally “is designed to express
community support of US policy in Vietnam. This is a new
kind of war for Americans, and
Americans must do their part by
demonstrating their support to
their elected officials and to tbe
world."
Mr. Sickler, speaking at a CVV
meeting last week, commented,
“Every indication, every poll, every survey shows solid support
for US Vietnam policy. It is time
the majority speaks . , . this rally
is the chance we have been waiting for.”

Stating the principles of the
CVV, Mr. Klinger added, “We
support the present US objective in Vietnam, which is to defeat the Communist threat to
South Vietnam and to guarantee
freedom and independence to its
people. This is our conception
of victory. We eagerly urge all
those who believe as we do to
join our rally and show your
support for a Victory in Vietnam.”

The CVV was organized at the
University last February for the
express purpose of supporting
the war in Vietnam. There are
presently over 250 members.

The UB Young Americans for
Freedom, Ukranian-American Students’ Association, the Republican Club, and the Students for
the US in Vietnam are also supporting the rally.

Free University of Buffalo Organizes
With Stress on Educational Role
The Free University of Buffalo (FUB) Committee met Monday,
April 18 to determine organizational procedure for the coming
year.

The committee stressed the educational rather than the political function in explaining its relation to the existing University.
However, it was generally established that there is no real need
to define the Free University itself, as it will evolve as the needs
of the students change. At pres-

We set out to ruin
some ball bearings and
failed successfully

ent, according to member Steve
Rogin, there need be no principles other than “free thought.”
The committee recognized the
problems of formalizing FUB, expressing the desire to avoid mistakes “peculiar to this institution

and others like it.” It was stressed
that the Free University of Buffalo is neither abandoning nor
totally negating the existing educational systems. Instead, the
committee said that through the
creation of FUB a serious gap in
this system can be filled by being
adjunct to them. Ideally, FUB
should “serve to create new possibilities for education, free
thought, and creativity.”
In order to make PUB an effective organization, member Larry
Rubin mentioned the necessity
for a high degree of interest and
participation. To measure this
interest, a subcommittee has been
set up to distribute questionnaires
to the academic and outside communities. Another subcommittee
•is presently working for a definite and permanent place where
classes can be held. FUB committee members are also investigating the need for minimal tuition
fees.
A large part of the meeting was
devoted to discussion between
faculty and students concerning
FUB’s chances of becoming an
effective supplement to education
at the University. The committee
members said they are confident
that with support and general interest, this can be a practical,
meaningful innovation.
The Free University of Buffalo
Committee will meet again on
Tuesday, April 26 at 7:30 p.m.
in room 264 Norton. Meetings are
open to students and faculty.

—PICNIC—

The Bell System has many small, automatic
telephone offices around the
country.The equipment in them
could operate unattended for
ten years or so, but for a

A
|

j.

JP J

problem.^M||jj|jr

The many electric motors in those offices
needed lubrication at least once a year. Heat
from the motors dried up the bearing oils,
thus entailing costly annual maintenance

out to ruin some ball bearings
by smearing them with an
icky guck called molybdenum
disulfide (MoS 2 ).

V

(Kji#

|

Swock! This solid lubricant, used a certain
way, actually increased the life expectancy

€of
H

the ball bearings by a factor
Now the motors can run
of
for at least a decade without

f

lubrication.

*

ten!

were conducted at Bell Telephone
We’ve learned from our
“failures.”
Our aim: investigate
Laboratories. Lubricant enginfeer George H. Kitchen decided Ieverything,
to do a basic experiment that
The only experiment that can
,Jp
would provide a motor with the
really be said to “fail" is the
worst possible conditions. He deliberately set
one that is never tried.

TIt

Bell

System/ja)

American Telephone t Telegraph end Associated Companies

There will be a picnic
for graduate students
April 24 in Akron Falls
Park at 1 p.m. Tickets
may be obtained in 311
Norton from 9-1 daily
for 25 cents.

See Europe for
Less than S100
Your slimmer in Europe for less
than S100 (including transportation). For the first time in
travel history you can buy directly from theTourWholesaler
saving you countless dollars.
Job offers may also be obtained with no strings attached. For
a “db-it-yourself” paiViphlct
with jobs, discount tours and
applications send SI (for material, handling, air mail) to
Dept. V., International Travel
Est., 68 Herrengasse, Vaduz,
Liechtenstein (Switzerland).

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

�n,

Trike

-

19W

*

a Then Travels
-

9 9 9 0 THOM

120 Miles

Alpha Phi Omega Fraternity
(APO) collected $530 during its
30-hour Tricycle Marathon for
Easter Seals. The Trike-a-thon
ended Wednesday afternoon at 4
p.m., after riding the tricycle
31 hours and 5 minutes, totaling

The Fraternity started the
Trike-a-thon Tuesday morning at
9 a.m. in Lafayette Square, Downtown Buffalo. APO member Steve
Millman reported that the members circled the downtown business district all day Tuesday.

Alpha Phi Omega winds up trike-a-thon around Norton Fountain
Mounted is Jefferson Kaye of WKBW fame.

pusut 11:30 p.m. and rode around

Millman mentioned

Norton Fountain

difficulty was encountered with

that minor

Award For Book on Philippines
Given to Friend by Columbia
istered

annually by Columbia
University. Judges choose up to

three winners each year.
Two awards were given this
year. Mr. Richard Morris received
the award lor his book The

Peace Corps Test
Given Monday
The

DR. FRIEND

Photo

by University Relations

Professor Theodore
Friend received the Frederick
Bancroft Award for excellence
in American History and International History Affecting the
U.S., April 21 at Columbia UniHistory

versity.

“I was absolutely surprised and
utterly happy,” Dr. Friend com-

mented.
He received the award for his
book Between Two Empires; The
Ordeal of the Philippines; 1926colonization. Dr. Friend said that
the book is based on interviews
and documentary research in the
Philippines, Japan, and the U.S.
He spent IVi years in the foreign countries investigating his
subject.

The Bancroft Award is admin-

National Student

Congress will be held August
September 1 at the Univer30
sity of Illinois. The four elected
UB delegates will attend the
Congress with Student Association President Clinton Deveaux
and NSA Coordinator Jeffrey
Lynford.
Kim Darrow: Student Association
Vice-President; Ad Hoc Committee to Appeal the Feinberg
Decision: 1965-66 Sludcnt-Faculty Administration; Foreign
Student Orientation.
Ellen
Cardone:
Convocations
Committee; Secretary, Student
Senate: Spectrum reporter;
past NSA delegate; member
, NSA
sub-board: Alpha Lambda Delta; Foreign Student Ori-

Between 7 and 8 p.m. Tuesday,
cycled in the WKBW parking lot while several brothers
were interviewed on the radio.

all night. Mr.

Election of four delegates and
to six alternates to the annual National Student Congress
of the National Student Association (NSA) will be held Wednesday, April 25.
up

Weiner.
The annual

APD

on eam-

NSA Elections; Wednesday

Candidates are: Kim Darrow,
Saralee Rubensfein, Ellen Cardone, Marty Feinrider, Russell
Goldberg, Dan Rotholz, and Bob

120 miles.

The assemblage arrived

PACE THRU

Peace Corps Placement
Test will be given Monday, April
25 in 231 Norton at 7 p.m.
The Placement Test is designed
to help the Peace Corps match applicants’ special abilities with the
300 different kinds of jobs to be
filled. If the test indicates a limited language-learning ability,
for example, the Peace Corps tries
to place the applicant in an English-speaking country.
The application form (Volunteer Questionnaire), rather than
the Placement Test, is the most
important factor in the selection
of Volunteers. Students or others
available for service or advance
training within the next year
must fill out a Volunteer Questionnaire before taking the test.
The Questionnaire, which is
submitted to the tester, can be
obtained in advance from Mr.
the UB
Michael DiGerlando,
Peace Corps Liaison on Campus
in Norton Hall.
The Placement Test takes about
an hour and a half. An optional
French or Spanish achievement
test requires another hour. Both
tests are non-competitive and re-

the tricycle axle, “which was not
built to carry 200 lb. people."
Solieitation for funds was held
all along the route, but campus
donations were heaviest, Mr.
Millman noted. “Almost $400 of
the $530 collected was contributed by UB students on campus."

The Marathon ended at 4 p.m.

Wednesday, with WKBW disc
jockey Jefferson Kaye riding the
last few laps around the fountain.

Mrs. Edward Letchworth, Buffalo area representative for Easter Seals, commended the Fraternity for the showing and concentrated publicity for the Easter
Seals campaign. A megaphone
was used for the event which
was covered by area press, radio
and T.V. “News of the event went
across the UPI wires to newspapers throughout the state.”

SFA Forum; Student
Senator.
Saralee Rubenstein: Convocations

Conference Hours; Chairman
Commuter Board; IRC representative: New Campus Committee; Foreign Student Orientation.
Robert Weiner: U C. Senator;
Chairman Course Evaluation;
Union Board House Committee; NSA Steering Committee;
Publications Board; Freshman
Orientation Group Leader; Finance Committee; Foreign Student Orientation.

Daniel Rotholi; UC. Senator; Senate Executive Committee: NSA
Committee: International Student Affairs Committee; Course
Evaluation Committee; Publications Board; Academic Affairs Committee.
Martin Feinrider: Chairman Bookstore Committee; Chairman
NSA Discount Service, Convocations Committee; Tower
House Council; President Ripon
Society; Debate Society; Chairman Displays Committee, Discriminating About Discrimina
tion.

entation;

Committee Co-Chairman; Publications Board Secretary; Student
Senate representative

from Arts &amp; Sciences; Freshman Orientation Group Leader
Foreign Student Orientation.
Russell Goldberg: U.C. Student

Senator: Photo Editor and Ed
itorial Asst., Spectrum; Leprechaun of Spectrum; Senate
Finance Committee Chairman,
1963-66; Senate Parliamcntar
ian, 1964-65; United States Stu
dent Press Association National Executive Board member;
Reporter on Congress News at
last year’s NSA Congress.
Stewart Edelstein:
Freshman

The SPECTRUM
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Phone 876-2284

�Friday, April 22, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE POUR

Cjoodman

—

Editorial (Comment

,

HUMPTY DUMPTY HAD A GREAT
FALL
ALL THE KING’S MEN HAD
the legislature.
EGG ON THEIR FACE
The student government has
The Buddhist-led rioting against Ky’s
organized and runs three major
Saigon government and the State Departprojects of its own: a big Tument’s last minute quarterbacking to detorial program for underprivileged children, involving 300 stufine the U.S. position in the civil conflict,
dents; a Community Involvement
has -served, up a juicy bone for political
—

I am writing this from San
Francisco State College where I

am employed

as "visiting

pro-

fessor" by the students, paid by
handsomely paid,
student dues
too, though I took the job because
I felt honored. So far as I know,
this arrangement is unique; and
by and large San Francisco State
has livelier student-initiated activities than I have seen else—

where in the country.

As a commuter college in a
cosmopolitan city, the college is
not unlike City College in New

York, but less crowded and, being in California, the students
are a little trimmer, richer, and

nuttier. Contrasted with most
state schools, there is a heavy
emphasis toward the Humanities
and social psychology, so the students tend to be more radical
than those aiming for organizational careers in engineering,
business, or physical sciences.
This is really a more radical
campus than Berkeley across the
Bay, and one wonders how it has
managed to remain so peaceful
and un-newsworthy. One reason,
I think, is that the student activity occurs with the tolerance
and even complicity of an intelligent administration (and much

Program, e.g. cultural work with
delinquents and abandoned children; and an Experimental College, with the usual offbeat subjects, action sociology, and emphasis on interpersonal contact.
Significantly, study in the Experimental College, is fulfilled by acceptable papers or other products, is rewarded by academic
credit toward degrees; and academic credit is given for other
extra-curricular activity, like the

of the faculty), unlike the pettiand blundering of Clark
Kerr and company. Another reason is that Berkeley is a great
and famous recipient of Pentagon and CIA money and so is
touchy territory, whereas S. F.
State docs not have this incubus
and the corresponding faculty
and administration.

speculators.

-

-

Consider my own status here.
As an employee of the students
I do not have to sign the loyalty
oath
which indeed I would

gon.

In the whirlwind of snap judgments
and profound thinking flowing out of the
State Department’s home in “foggy bottom,” one incident surfaced offering a
glimpse at the inner-thinking in State.
American C-120 transports were used to
ferry troops loyal to Ky north to Danang
Airbase. In Ky’s words, the troops would
“liberate” Danang from the Communists.

The

Lodge’s intervention in the civil dispute, and support from Washington for
the use of our equipment and personnel,
undercut the entire premise of our fighting “because the Viet Namese want us.”
The demonstrations challenged the assumption of support from the People.
Washington not only ignored them, but
lent its troops to put them down.
Fighting to protect an ally is one thing.
But if we are in Viet Nam to militarily
halt Communist expansion, let’s say so and
not resort to Machiaevellian tactics by
propping up pro-American governments
against the will of nationalists.

grump

Lawrence in New York, Nevertheless. my position is chartered by
the Administration which neither
Welcome to Pick On Conservahires nor can fire me. (During
tives Day! I am about to level a
a hassle over an appointment for
mighty blast that will level all
next semester
the candidate before me
and shake seismowas Allen Ginsberg
the presigraphs as far away as Peking.
dent of the students told the . . .
would you believe Canisius?
administration, "It's none of your . . . I didn’t really think so.
vantage of getting rid of graddamned business whom we hire
To horse, to horse, the nastys
ing!). No matter what the Slate with our money.”) Personally, I
arc coming. Whoops . . . nasty
association does, S.F. State will
do not intend to make the unneawfully close to recent defunct
attempt to go if alone. What will cessary trouble, but in this haven is
and more recently reawakenbe the position of the administraof John Birch and the mores of ing
German political party, and
tion in such a case? Remember the ranch-house, how can one as ex-Vice-president and present
that the school is supported by ever tell?
candidate for candidate Richard
Nixon pointed out in the case
of the Du Bois Clubs being sneakily arranged to bring down wrath
on the phonetically similar but
completely blames The Boys Club
only the Communist conspiracy
The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
would stoop so low, as to use
Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus. Buffalo. N. Y. 14214
phonetic smoke screens. I would
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
not stoop so low . . . bend a little,
May, except for exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.
maybe, but stoop, never. I have
a bad back. Where the hell were
Editorin-Chief
JEREMY TAYLOR
—-

—

—

—

—

Business

Two tactics of Saigon-American stratOne was the practice
of calling anything anti-Saigon Communist; an example of the “editor-or” logic
used to divy up Viet Namese in the war’s
gallup poll. The presence of this “thinking” was confirmed by Donald Duncan
when he spoke Tuesday night. Totally
lacking in the binary logic is the possibility of a third alternative, like anti-Ky
anti-Communist nationalists. This could
create a strong neutralism such as Kennedy hoped for Laos.
This brings us to the second tactic,
the practice of sweeping any evidence of
less than full backing for the pro-American Ky government under the rug, including, in this incident, Henry Cabot
Lodge’s use of American equipment and
personnel to prop up the Ky government.
egy were exposed.

—

not sign in the California state
system because of its bad history,
although, in an amiable mood. I
have signed such a paper at Sarah

To give a presently important
example of faculty temper, the
Senate at S.F. State has just
unanimously directed its delegate to the State College Faculty
Senates- to resolve not to cooperate with the Selective Service
weeding out by grading
perhaps by adopting a pass-fail system (which has the further ad-

THE

•

The next day Ky was back to apologize
for saying Communists controlled Danang.
“It was a mistake,” he said.

Marching into the headlines have come
speculations of Buddhist strength, and
their intentions to topple Ky from office
and reports of Buddhist leaders refusing
to rule out possible negotiations with the
Viet Cong, prompted speculations that the
U.S. might be asked to pick up its troops
and go home.
But the ensuing events and the scurrying north to the Hue Danang area of
Buddhist leader Thich Quang Thi to hush
newspaper. Besides, many prothe anti American demonstrations, and
fessors try to set up courses in Thi’s assurance that Buddhists favored the
which the students determine U.S. presence to fight Communists did
curriculum and method, and much to still the pens of eager Johnson
critics pointing to the riots in another asthere is a pretty good opportunsault on U.S. policy.
ity for individual students to design their own study and get
The issue remains up in the air. And
credit. A fanfare has greeted all the bleeding ulcers from Washington
the (excellent) Muscatine report to Saigon only testify to the chaos in Saifor academic reform at Berkeley,
but most of its best spirit and
many of its concrete proposals
have modestly been in operation
at S.F. State.

ness

•

SPECTRUM

we?

Manager

RAYMOND D

VOLPE

placards. The big one which reads
WE BACK OUR BOYS IN VIET
NAM is an expression of a legitimate viewpoint and is in the

news vein.

The second young
troop is carrying a sign which
says “Some call it protesting, I
call it cowardness.” We well overlook the logical absurdity of the
young man in question carrying
a sign with the word “I” in it
albeit the use of a nonexistent

word, cowardness????, would support his construction of same.
But it does get a little galling
when the local newspapers have
to resort to this means of communication.
No doubt the photographer and
the photography editor are all
the proud recipients of gold stars
for so cleverly picking out what
the BEN wanted, but if the news
can really pat itself on the back
for winning so many local journalism awards and then turn
around and pull a piece of yellow
jouraiism
or should we say
red, white and blue journalism?
like that it shows a certain
lack of taste, ethics, and intelligence. Not that we have been led
to so expect these traits from
ole Big BEN but it would have
been nice.
—

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff—Loretta Angelina, Joanne Bouchier, Russell Buchman. Karen Green,
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman,
Eileen Teitler. Nancy Toder, Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg.
Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Staff —Bonnie Barlow. Ron Ellsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons. Barbara Loeb,
Audrey Logel. Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack. William Weinstein.
Staff —Mike

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Castro.

Sports
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Editor
Dolan.

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Farbman. Bob Frey.

Steve

Scott

Forman,

Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Stephanie Parker. Steve Silverman.
Copy Editor
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Staff—Carol Becker. Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern. Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer,
Claire Shottenfeld. Susan Zuckerberg
Staff —Joanne

Staff—Terry
Mancini.

Bouchier.

Advertising Manager
Angelo, Audrey Cash, Pat
Photography

Editor

RON

HOLTZ

Rosenfeld.

Steve

Silverman,

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EDWARD JOSCELYN

Staff—Don Blank. Peter Bonneau,

Marc Levine. Ivan
Robert Wynne

Joseph Feyes, Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber,
Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman,

Makurh,

Circulation

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Manager

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Advisor

DALLAS

GARBER

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
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Paid at
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Represented
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,
son Ave New YorK N. Y.

Oh yes. On Page 24, Section II,
of the Buffalo Evening News
(Here we go again) is a cute little
picture of two cute little boys
who marched in a sweet little
parade last Sunday. The parade
was sponsored by the Army &amp;
Navy Union, USA and its auxiliary. Since the theme of the
parade was United We Fought,
United We March and the general idea was to show the troops
currently being mobbed by the
Vietnamese that we are on their
side even if they aren't (actually
that wasn’t the general idea, I
just made that up) I would sort
of expect The BEN to cover it.
They are welcome to quote
Col. Gajewski as informing the
spectators and marchers that
“freedom is the allowance of
particular privileges.” Albeit the
wording of that statement frightens me to death.

What upsets me is the fact
that these two little kids are
wearing what are apparently kiddies’ army uniforms and bearing

—

Somewhat closer to home is the
case of one Mr. James Callan and
a column known as The Right.
Back in the Friday, April 8 Spectrum Master Callan wrote a piece
on abortion. While I thought it
a bit overstated it served to remind me that I had better continue to avoid the subject I have
this lingering doubt that abortion is completely moral myself.
Anyway the April 8 column
closed as follows: “To sqm up,
if abortion is ever moral then
it is always moral. I submit that
manifest evidence shows that
abortion is not always moral, and
hence is not ever moral.”

In Tuesday’s Spectrum, last,
Mr. Callan proceeded to attack a
gentleman who had had the gall

Raymond D. Volpe

by STEESE

to disagree with him on the basis
that the conclusions drawn in
the April 8th column, as previous-

ly quoted, were the products of
logical reasoning, and challenged
the other gentlemen, a Mr. MeCubbin, (I thought he was the
one famed for losing 500 hats)
to show him where his error in
logic was.
Although I firmly believe that
attacking other columnists should
be confined to slow news days
and rainy days when one can’t get
out to buy that drove of liberal
gadflys (to rather than of perhaps) the BEN. I should be happy
to point out, or attempt to since
I never had any logic . . Thank
you very much but I am aware
.

. . that there is
it is apparent
a bit of a hole in the April 8
logic. If A is ever M, it is always
M. If A is not always M, A is
never M. So Mr. Callan sir, even
if manifest evidence (manifest
meaning apparent to the senses
or mind, obvious) proves that
Abortion is not always Moral the
conclusion is not valid. If A is
never M and if A is not always
M can be the same condition,
damn it.
.

In addition to which the possibilities of abortion being moral
were never discussed, they were
merely swept under the rug under the classification of “pet

justifications”.

And finally, and the question
that has personally botheied me
for' some time, how can 1 such a
positive and easy distinction be
made by the general public and
by any individual between birth
control and abortion? It is perfectly all right then Mr. Callan,
to allow people to attempt to
prevent conception, but by God
it is immoral to do anything if
the means fail, even if through
no fault of the involved parties.

I do not know the answer to
either question. Anyone who does
can borrow this space anytime
they wish.

�46
i \
114 £ i
Friday, April 22, 1966
'

M U

3

j

1

j

PAG! FIVE

SPECTRUM

oCetterA

to

the (Editor

Invites

1

I must complain most vigorously, and request that you print
my complaint, about your unfortunate release of supposed news
against my explicit and, indeed,

urgent request
When your reporter asked me
if Robert Creeley was coming

here, on the basis of some rumor
heard by her. I replied that I
thought he might be. but the
appointment was not yet official.
I not only refused to furnish her
with information, but I fervently
requested that no mention whatever be made of this until official
word was received. My request
was violated, at considerable em

Surely you must be jesting sir
when you stat that the Greek
System is trivial. If not, what do
you hold important? Must a group
attack every institution in sight
in order to establish its importance? Must it promote “individuality" by encouraging all its members to grow beards and refrain
from bathing? Are the only peo-

pie who further education those
who wish to abolish degrees and
promote a “free” educational system? Not that I do not support
the right to express one’s opinion,
but surely the minority view
should not be the only one expressed.
The Greek System

does offer
much to the college student. It
offers him a chance to serve his
contemporaries and to do things
in a group that are much less
satisfying when done alone. A
cocktail party before a big dance,
a party where you can drink,
dance and have fun together, or
just getting together with the
guys to take part in a sporting
event or just a bull session over
a keg of beer. And believe it or
not sir, but we’ve even been
known to study together. (There

Spouses, Kids, Stags and Dates of
GSA invited Rain or Snow or Shine

SUNDAY APRIL
I RM.

interfraternity award for
achievement.) Surely,
you cannot be totally against having fun. Even you must get tired
of protesting once in a while and
take part in the bourgeois prac-

scholastic

tice of relaxation.

rT

And as for service to our contemporaries, it is difficult to do
such things as are done by more
meaningful groups. Participation
in a blood drive can hardly compete with a march down Main

The most recent demonstrations
under Buddhist leadership clearly
demonstrate beyond a shadow of
a doubt the bankruptcy of Presi-

dent Johnson’s Vietnam policy.
Although many Americans still
refuse to believe the truth, the
Buddhists, who happen to reside
in Vietnam, denounce American
military

might as occupational

troops, not as an army in the
forefront of democratic reforms.
The Buddhists, quite correctly,

inform us that President Johnson
and his predecessors supported
and established nine years of
tyranny in Vietnam under the
cloak of democracy.
The oppression resulting from
our military rule over Vietnam
is shared by other religions as
well. The Rev, Hoang Quynh,
chairman of the Catholic Greater
Unity Force and a prominent figure in the ouster of Dr. Quat last
June in favor of the Ky dictatorship, now declares Ky’s rule to

Hm

Street, and it would be even

more difficult to compare a Heart
Fund collection with a camping
trip to the wilds of Norton fountain. But we do try our best.
So even if we arc “evil” and
do “thwart individuality,” Mr.
Taylor, please don’t call us trivial.
—Joseph Rollek
Pi Lambda Tau Fraternity

be worse than Diem's. "There arc
so many things wrong,” reports
Father Quynh, “with the (Ky)
government it is difficult to know
where to begin to criticize it.”
When are Americans going to
demand removal of American
troops? How much more killing
must Americans accomplish to
impose American dictatorial rule
over a people so intent upon selfdetermination?
Sidney M. Willhelm
Elwin H, Powell
Bill J. Harrell

The Spectrum has continually
covered theatre events on campus
and given them publicity. For
this I am grateful. However, since
the reporters chosen to write reviews and publicity have had little experience in the field, I feel
that specially the reviews are
worth little. Take for example the

review of At Liberty and Smythe,
in The April IS, 1900 issue, by
Lynne Bernstein. While it may
be valid opinion which many
students may agree with, it has
little value as a criticism. I would
ask that you either assign one
member of your staff to do reviews on a permanent basis, or
ask someone from the Student
Theatre Guild to write it for you.

Cramming
Clowning
Crashing
Pubbing
Frugging

As members of the faculty, we
would like to express our support
of Dr. Zimmerman and our re-

for the Spectrum attack
on him. We do not consider it
“unpardonable” for a professor to
hold anti-Communist views, as
expressed by Dr. Zimmerman in
the letter of April 8. We ourselves are in accord with these
pulsion

views and do not feel the need
to be pardoned by the Spectrum

views, and coming events in the

area. As for vested interests, we
criticize each other more harshly
than your reporters can do with
any accuracy, and also have more
technical knowledge of the subject involved.

—Sandra Klein

reputable

particularly object to a
description of a professor’s views
as being “blatant and stupid redbaiting,” “crude”, “rhetorically
We

student

PERMANENT PRESS
Vi xv

Shirts and Slacks of
FORTREL and cotton

newspaper.

irrelevent”, “shameful”, “shrill”

From

Howard W. Post
Charles H. V. Ebert
Edward J. Thompson

they’re really with it...Perma-

John Halstead

King Lee

Lenore Banks

Such obnoxious generalities would

reluctantly

by two other professors involved, according to the
N. Y. Times of April 14, 1966.
Professor Ralph Smuckler said,
"It may not have been right to
get into it. We were caught and
felt we had to follow through.”
Such is the morality of some
of our respected teachers. “It
we
may not have been right
were caught.”

dawn to discotheque

Sincerely yours,

B. Raphael Scaly
Henry Kast

and “ignorant”. Even if Dr. Zim
merman were the school janitor,

of this plan, has been

i

Wmmgfar* 1

be grossly inappropriate for a

for them.

corroborated

S

K*o*

We have often asked to be given

nently pressed SOQo Fortrel poly
ester and 50cotton make Mr
Wrangler your best buddy from
early classes to just-one-morefrug at midnight... and they're
guaranteed for one year's normal

i

wear.

M.S.U. Team, Front For C.I.A.
TO THE EDITOR:
A recent Ramparts article has
revealed that a special Michigan
State University team which was
supposed to be aiding the South
Vietnamese Government from
1955-59 was used as a front by
the Central Intelligence Agency
to carry out their usual dirty
"Work. (Apparently they failed).
The admission by Stanley K.
Sheinbaum, former coordinator

WT

Il^i

Faculty Supports Zimmerman
TO THE EDITOR

I

'S£*i

Tickets Also Available at Norton Union Ticket Office

i

Theatre Critique Condemned
TO THE EDITOR

Z4

Tlckete Available
in 311 Norton Hall
9-1 Daily

is an

Buddhist Uprisings Denounce U.S. Policy
TO THE EDITOR

|

picnic

barrassment to me. You must
know that organs of new make
such releases only after they become official. Mr, Greeley’s proposed appointment is not official,
and theerfore not yet news. In
printing it. you have violated a
necessary part of University protocol. .
—Albert S. Cook, Chairman

Greek Refutes Editorial
TO THE EDITOR:
I am amazed at your lack of
vision in thinking that an organization which “brutalizes and
thwarts the individuality of its
adherents” and “is an evil and
anti-educational system” can still
manage to be trivial. Why, even
the terrible capitalistic war mongers who seek to frustrate the
free Communist movement by a
dirty war sound less awesome
and destructive.

All Graduate Students to

The Annual Graduate Student

University Protocol Violated
TO THE EDITOR;

f

The Graduate Student Association of S.U.N.Y

|

Well we’re all caught. In an
ugly war in Vietnam. Supporting
the slaughter of 200,000 or more
Communists in Indonesia, etc.
And what about the suffering
that isn't violent and in our newspapers. Starvation. Slavery, overt
or subtle. Racism. Etc.
We are responsible.
Sincerely,

...

Don Blank

They stay like new forever. In a
full range of colors and styles.
Adam, Meldrum A Anderson

389 Main Street

JJ-

&amp;

Buffalo, New York
or write

MfcWraungl«r
350 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10001

I

¥

�pa6e six

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■»

F‘B I C'‘TR U M

Friday,

Cacotopia and Eutopia

/

By STEPHEN CRAFTS

Look
vi'

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on My

Ye Mighty
nd Despair!

ijjp

,

m

the right

JAMES CALLAN
First of all congratulations to
Jeremy Taylor for producing a
good editorial: The Daily Spectrum. (That makes two editorials
this school year with which 1
can wholeheartedly agree. The
first was his recommendation that
an
you watch “Secret Agent”
excellent program starring an excellent actor.) Of course, a daily
Spectrum is just a dream as of
now; there just isn't enough material
seldom do we have in
one week the selection of a new
President, a four-page VISTA insert, and three letters to the editor from abortionists. But it is a
goal to be striven for.
Which brings me to the point
—

—

of this column, that third letter
to the editor. Mr. Jerry Gross begins by attempting to discredit
my views on abortion, proceeds
to the minimum wage, and concludes with the war in Vietnam,

What seems to be wrong with
each of my articles is that they
are all defended on the grounds
of morality. He claims that there
is no such thing as objective
morality and that all ethics arc
relative and are motivated by
self-interest, I agree that there
is a tendency among mankind as
of late toward equating ethics
and self-interest, but certainly
this is something to be bemoaned,
not cheered. The man without
principle is nothing but a mouth.
It is the belief in principles and
the use-«f his mind in applying
them that makes a man human.
To relegate morality to the status of self-interest is to relegate
man to the status of animality.
Gross is admittedly partisan
toward labor, cannot see unbiased principle, and accuses all
who disagree with him of being
partisan toward big business. If

so 'Mr. Gross, how do you explain
my statement printed on January
28 that the Transport Workers

Union of New York City had
done rightly in its strike and the
Courts wrongly in their injunction. Or how about my statement
on February 11 that ordinarily
a union should be allowed to

coerce management, by legitimate
means, into establishing a union
shop. Are these examples of my
"partisanship to these giant corporations"?
Let me now inform Mr. Gross
and his fellow members of S.D.S.
that I will not take the lime to

refute

identity and community—was the
focus of an intercollegiate conference. “The Urban Challenge,"
at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology April 13 through 16.

About 200 delegates from all
parts of the country attended the
conference, which was organized
by political science and city planning

undergraduates

at

M.l.T.

Ellen Cardone and Leonard Gerson represented UB.
An interdisciplinary approach
to urban problems was emphasized in the choice of speakers
as well as delegates.

Architecture critic. Wolf von
Ekhart discussed the disciplines
of human scale and public space
as the essence of cities. He contrasted the form of Selma, Alabama, where the centers of public power, comerce and daily life
are tangible to all. with Watts,
Los Angeles, where all the forces
of discrimination are invisible.
The formlessness of Watts, the
lack of “a place to take a revolution to," was seen by Ekhart
as causing the futility and despair of the riots in that section
He contrasted this to the physical confrontation of the power
structure which made the Selma demonstrations meaningful
and constructive for the people
involved in them.
Most of the speakers on plan
ning departed from the older
view of a complete city, such

as Brasilia, which was built according to the tastes of one or
more planners. The speakers
warned of the imposition of
middle-class intellectual preferences upon the entire population.
Non planned, haphazard
growth was also decried. According to a student speaker, the

balance should be found in drawing out and “articulating the
aspiration" of urban dwellers.
Political scientist Leonard Fein
described a living city as one
that "comprehends diversity,”
seeing the task of planning as
encouraging people to accept the
responsibility of choosing their
own way of life. He asked. “Can
the slide rule on the draftsman's
table ordain the gentle chaos
that diversity implies?", advocating a "piecemeal" planning to
account for spontaneous growth.
The issues of the conference
were illustrated by a tour of
Boston redevelopment sites, and
by a panel from a Cambridge

neighborhood beset by , the typical urban problems. Boston’s
newest low and middle-income
housing projects are radically
different from the dreary' caverns
that the word "projects” brings
to mind. Criteria of human scale,
style, and public space are applied. and facilities like schools
and stores were included in the
area. The renewal program is
unusually extensive,
involving
one-third of the city’s area, and
including new government and
business centers as well as construction

and rehabilitation of
Boston's Director of Redevelopment, Edward Logue. said that

thousands of
in the
streets. The world’s leaders were

Marxian views of
of the masses
that's been done too many times
by too many people. I will state,
however, that their attempt to defend them on the basis of antimorality is just as futile as any
defense ever has been.

love

powerless. They began to laugh.
They all abdicted.
Everyone
thought it was a fine joke, as
they had nothing to abdicate. Ian
Smith sent Wilson a telegram,
“The joke’s on us stop.” In Detroit General Motors announced that it would begin manufacturing safe cars for everyone at cost. Wall Street turned
out free monopoly sets for old
time’s sake. Millions of tons of
Drano were poured into the
Great Lakes and fish began to
appear again. Hollywood started
to consider the film as an art

of the world demanding immediate anarchy. Extremism had become the norm. J. Edgar Hoover
called it a Communist Plot but
was hooted down by a million
people yelling “don’t you wish.”
A housewife in Chevy Chase,
Maryland complained that White
House pickets were trampling
her roses. A quick collection garnered her enough to plant orchids
and she joined the demonstration. Marvin Zimmerman urged
moderation. But it was now extremism; He too joined the de-

form.
Birth control information was
disseminated in place of commercials- on TVr The Vatican announced that Cardinal Spellman
would auction off St, Patricks,
proceeds to go to Vietnamese
refugees. The Pope absolved
everyone of everything. Martin
Luther, Moses, Nietzsche, and
Marx were made saints. Even
Jean-Paul Sartre was happy. He
attended a mass by a bishop
high on LSD who admitted that
Jesus had been a hippy.

monstration. New Establishment:
no establishment. In New York
the Fugs entertained fifteen million people in Central Park. John
Lindsay donated the sound equipment. No one cared that the subways weren’t running. They walked and dug the trees and birds.
In Berkeley Clark Kerr was heard
leading a four-letter word cheer.
In the South whites and Negroes
danced in the integrated streets
and didn’t worry about rape.
They were brothers now as they
had actually been for years without wanting to know it. Back in

In Venezuela millions of former peons serenaded a Gulf Oil
executive and he invited them
all in for a party afterwards.
Flying saucers were no longer
afraid to land. Little green men
were welcomed even in the sub-

Washington a wavering Lyndon
Johnson sent Valentines to Kosygin and Mao. Fidel Castro flew
up from Havana to spend a weekend with Lucy Baines. Her father
proposed a tax on love to support
his Great Society programs. He
was reminded good-naturedly that
the people already had one. In
Vietnam American GIs were Invited into Viet Cong huts for
dinner. In Paris a traffic jam

urbs. Real estate agents didn’t
object. One of the visitors from
outer space was made Premier
Emeritus of Russia. Everyone
everywhere was happy. No one
asked why. No one worried about
it. Nuclear-powered lights kept
the skies bright and the celebration lasted for weeks.

their

exploitation

the most urgent need of the
program is ‘.‘more money,” adding
that many plans have been deed. Many speakers saw the need
for new concepts and approaches
as more pressing than that of

funds.

A frequent question, “To what
what extent can urban problems
be solved by advances in architecture and technology?" was
asked. Ekhart criticized the lack
of technical advances toward pro-

viding inexpensive adequate housing for all, characterizing present
construction methods as “primitive." Others, including architect
Louis Sauer disagreed, attributing urban problems to the low
state of knowledge in the social
sciences, and calling for an enlightened approach to “human

renewal."

Conference chairman
David
Mundel evaluated the program
as successful in bringing people
of many disciplines together “to
seek a common language." and in
increasing their committment to
use the best resources of each
field to combat the problems of
the city.

—CIVIL RIGHTS—
Students interested in
attending the Intercol1 e g i a t e Conference on
Civil Rights and the Law
April 28-30 at Oberlin
College. Ohio, should
contact Jeffrey Lynford
in the Senate office.

MIDNIGHT SHOW SATURDAY

—

Intercollegiate Conference at
T.
Focuses On "The Urban Challenge''
By ELLEN CARDONE

was caused by
couples making

CRAFTS' CHIMERA
I awoke one morning and turned on Huntley-Brinkley who, for
some strange reason, had only
one news item; billions of people
were picketing in the capitals

Works,

Ian
m*

AJWii aa, 1966-3

Ok

Mcomi

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balcony

£
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SHELLEY WINTERS PETER FALK:LEE GRANT RUBY DEE

must

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Matinees Vi Price

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flic
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Thurs.
Sunday
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(Conference CJheater
YOURSELF

You can have fun .
pay . . . and hove a

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earn good
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variety

in this

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�Friday, Apr it M, 1966

SPECTRUM

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PAG!

Candidates For Mr. Faculty

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This book can help you to

Draft
Deferment
DR. KATKIN
Photo

DR. EBERT

DR. ZIMMERMAN

great honor to be nominated by

Voting will take place Wednesday and Thursday, April 27 and
28, in Norton. The winner will
be announced and awarded a
trophy and a gift at the Spring

by Marc Levine

Mr Faculty candidates, Geography Professor Charles Ebert, Psychology Professor Edward Katkin
and Philosophy Professor Marvin
Zimmerman will be presented
Monday, April 25, at 3:30 p.m.
in the Dorothy Haas Lounge.

The purpose of the contest is
“to honor the faculty member
who encourages mutual respect
among faculty and students,” according to campaign chairman
Beth Greenberg. “It is not only
a popularity contest.”
Dr. Ebert, who is doing research on the possibilities of developing the economic potentials
in underdeveloped areas of foreign countries, was nominated by
the residents of Schoellkopf Hall.
He commented, “I consider it a

Photo by Russell Goldberg

the students.”
Dr. Katkin, currently doing research on stress, was nominated
by Theta Chi. Commenting on his
nomination, he said, “I’m delighted, I want to win. I’ll do what’s

Weekend dance.

Dr. Zimmerman, faculty advisfor the United
States in Vietnam, was nominated
by the residents of Tower Hall.
He said, “I am flattered but uncomfortable. I don’t like popularity contests, but I appreciate
being nominated.”
or to Students

Questions will be accepted from

CLASSIFIED
FOR RENT

-

them

SUMMER

SUBLET;

TWO

tion period.

MUST SELL girl’s Raleigh
9 speed bicycle, excellent

purchased. Maps with directions
to the Hearthstone Manor will
appear on the back of tickets
which are available at the Norton Ticket Booth at $3 per cou-

(unity to meet the “Mr. Faculty"
candidates at a Student-Faculty
Reception Monday in the Haas
Lounge from 3 to 5 p.m. Philosophy Professor Marvin Zimmerman, Georgraphy Professor Charles Ebert and Psychology Professor Edward Katkin have been

with

ple.

9 to 4 p.m.

nominated.
Stunt Night rehearsal will be
held Tuesday from 7 to 10 p.m.
in the Conference Theater.
Thursday afternoon the Laurentian Singers from St. Lawrence University will perform in
the Fillmore Room at 2:30 p.m.
Stunt Night will begin Thursday
at 8 p.m. in the Clark Gym.
Eleven groups will perform, representing sororities, fraternities,
Angel Flight and the Arnold Air
Society. Following Stunt Night
there will be “coffee house” entertainment in the Rathskellar
from 10:20 to 2 a.m, sponsored
by the Mixer Committee.
All classes have been cancelled
April 29. A heralding
parade will proceed up Main
Street to the campus at 10 a.m.
that day. The Trike Grand Prix
Race, sponsored by Theta Chi
Fraternity, will be run in the
Tower Parking Lot at 12 noon,
followed by the Olympic com

Friday,

Petitions.

Friday's activities will culminate in the semi-formal dance
honoring Dr. Clifford Furnas at
•he Hearthstone Manor in Cheek
towaga from 9 to 1 p.m., during
w hich the Queen and “Mr. Fac-

Saturday's activities will begin
an Inter-Squad football
game from 2 to 4 p.m, in Rotary Field. A mixer will be held
outside Norton from 4 to 6 p.m.
and there will be a judo exhibit

in the Fillmore Room from 3
to 5 p.m.

Tower Hall will hold an Open
House Sunday afternoon and will
sponsor a fireworks display in
Baird Parking Lot during the

'63 OLSMOBILE CUTLASS
vertable, red with white

Monday through Wednesday, Ap
ril 25 through 27.

British poets Mr. Alfred Alvarez and Dr. George Barker, have

been appointed visiting professors in the English Department
until May.
Mr. Alvarez, poet and critic, is
the author of Stewards of Excellence, The School of Donne, The
New Poetry, and Under Pressure.
He received his bachelor’s and
master's degrees at Corpus Christi College, Oxford University.

Dr. Barker recently published
two books of poems. Collected

Poems, 1930-60 and Dreams of a
Summer Night. He holds a doctor’s degree from Imperial Tohoku University in Japan.

C AN

TAKE

IMIS TEST ONI Y

ONCI

your college

or local bookstore

con

S&amp; [TOO

PUBLICATION

puss

Presenting The Drinking Song for Sprite:

"ROAR, SOFT-DRINK, ROAR!”
(To the tune of "Barbara Fritchie")

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dercoated, only 10,000 miles.
$975. Call Russell Goldberg,
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automatic, power steering,
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good. $195, 837-5479 after 6 p.m.

SKI JACKET (medium) green and
beige, reversible. Call TF 2
8073 after 6 p.m. Never used,
bought this year.
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The movie Music Man will be
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didates.
A Fashion Show featuring the
contestants will be held today in
the Fillmore Room at 3:30 p.m.
General voting will take place
Wednesday and Thursday from

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Plus Special Tips A techniques for scoring

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no bottled liquor will be permit-

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Provides intensive training, drills
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Call TT 4-9155.
—

SERVICES

Traditionally, a lusty, rousing fight song is
de rigeur for every worthy cause and institution.
But we wrote a song for Sprite anyway. We'd like you
to sing it while drinking Sprite, though this may
cause some choking and coughing. So what? It's all in
good, clean fun. And speaking of good, clean things,
what about the taste of Sprite? It's good. It's
clean. However, good clean things may not exactly be
your idea of jollies. In that case, remember that
Sprite is also very refreshing. "Tart and tingling,”
in fact. And very collegiate. And maybe we'd better
quit while we're ahead.
So here it is. The Drinking
Song For Sprite. And if you can get a group together
to sing it--we'd be very surprised.
Roar, soft drink, roar!
You're the loudest soft drink
we ever sawr!
So tart and tingling, they
couldn't keep you quiet:
The perfect drink, guy,
To sit and think by,
Or to bring instant refreshment
To any campus not! Ooooobh-Roar, soft drink, roar!
Flip your cap, hiss and bubble,
fizz and gush!
Oh we can't think
Of any drink
That we would rather sit with!
Or (if we, feel like loitering)
to hang out in the strit with!
Or sleep through English lit' wi
Roar! Soft drink! Roar!
Yeahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh, SPRITE!

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TINGLING. WE JUST COULDN'T
KEEP IT QUIET.

�Friday, April 22,

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

IM6

"GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES'

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"Gentleman Pr

SUZANNE SCHILLO

KAREN KOZLOWl
Blonde and blue-eyei
Kozkvwski’s theme is
men Prefer Blondes."
her of Alpha Gamma I
rority, Karen has servet
1966 Military Ball Co

“Powder Puffs and Poses” is
the theme of Sigma Kappa Phi’s
candidate Suzanne Schillo. The
campaign reflects her professional modeling experience and her
membership in the Professional
Model's Guild.
Her activities on campus include: Freshman and Varsity
Cheerleading, Chairman of Special Events for Homecoming,
Chairman of Career Planning Conference, Chairman of Group
Leaders for Freshman Orientation, Tour Guide, Student guide
for summer planning conference
and president of her pledge class.
She was awarded the Cap and
Gown Society’s “Freshman Ring”
for the most outstanding Fresh-

man

SUZIE DUFFY

O

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woman.
19-year-old Suzanne is an English major with 2.2 average. In
her spare time, she enjoys modern dance, swimming, ice-skating, tennis, and sewing her own

clothes.

Blondes"

Planning
Career
Coi
Commuter Committee a
Sophomore Sponsor. SI
member of the Newm
and attended their Natio
vention last summer.
Karen is a member of
ly organized Pre-Medical
She studied at Butgers
Science
National
Fo
Grant and partial ated i
teer hospital work.

A 19-year-old English
Karen enjoys jazz, 6aI
folk dancing. She is intei
classical art and music, cl
drama, swimmiM and
Off campus, Karen is a p
model and member of thi
Skating Club of Buffalo

�Prtd.y, April 22, 1966

SPECTRUM

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\REN KOZLOWSKI

SUZIE DUFFY

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and blue-eyed Karen
ki’s theme is “Gentleefer Blondes.” A memMpha Gamma Delta Solaren has served on the
ilitary Ball Committee,
Planning
Conference,
Committee and as a
ire Sponsor. She is a
of the Newman Club
nded their National Conlast summer.
is a member of the new-

sr

ized Pre-Wedical
at

Society,
Rutgers with a

Science

id partiM

Foundation

ated in volun-

pital work.

pear-old English
njoys
ring. She is

major,

ballet, and

interested

in

art and music, children’s
swimmio* and driving.

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of the Figure
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of
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Buffalo.

Suzie Duffy is Chi Omega’s
“Personality in Print.” Her theme
reflects Suzie’s interest and experience in journalism.
Suzie is a 21 year old senior
majoring in history. She has
worked on the Buffalo CourierExpress staff and has written
for the UB Office of Public Re-

lations.

Early this year she appeared
on television in the opening segment of “The Student Mood.”

Suzie has been a member of
the Freshman Orientation Committee, Newman Club, and was
Rush Chairman of her sorority.
In 1965 she was chosen Rose
Queen of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity.

Off campus, Suzie enjoys reading, sewing, writing, bowling and
golf.

SUZANNE SCHtLLO

�Friday, April

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

22, 19M

Null and Void
Declared
Elections
IRC
Mary Anthony Dance Theatre
By Student Judiciary Elections Court

REVIEW:

By RUTH

SHAPIRO

The Mary Anthony Dance
Theatre gave a good performance in modern dance on Saturday last. The program consisted
of three sets in progression from
Renaissance to Romantic Impres
sionism. to a contemporary drematic piece. Physically, the dancers were more round than the
professional

stereotype

dancer,

resulting in a pleasing company

of womanly women and manly
men who. though for some part
were a bit inexperienced, still
created harmonious moods and
meaningful communications with
the audience.
The first piece. "Plaisanteries
D'Amour" was a unified flowing
series of short sketches based
on 16th and 17th century poems
Marlow's
and Be
My Love." The setting was tra-

including

Christopher

“Come Live

With

Me

ditional for the time: the taped
music was primarily recorders
with some drums; the costumes
for the women were ankle-length
dresses and chin-strap hats. For
the men. lights and hip-jackets
were worn All wore slippers. The
characteristic 17th century state
ly dance, swinging hip and hyperflexled wrists were prevalent,
A rose—basic symbol of such
hearts and flowers poetry of the
time was employed in several
dances. In “Imvc, Let Me Call
Her Choicest Flowers.” a lover's
triangle was

delightfully depict-

ed. A young man flirts with a
girl, she returns his attentions
but is challenged by the flirta-

When the
tions
man decides to flirt with both,
the ladies prove coy and dance
of another girl

off

together leaving

him alone.

The effect of the whole series
was gay and very lovely, although
the parody on the behavior of
a previous era. was not as sharp
as it could have been.

The second set. done to “Songs”
by

Debussy,

"The

Songs

was

inspired by

of Innocence” and

"Songs of Experience” by William Blake. The first part represented innocence and was por
traced by three women in floaty

white dresses who traveled

in

quick running steps, creating a

UB Artists on TV
The CBS-TV program “Camera
Three” will present a musical
performance featuring the artistsin-residence of the I B Center
of the Creative and Performing
Arts April 24 on Channel 4 at
11 am
Creative
Associate
Michael
Sahl's composition "For Clarinet

and Percussion" will make its
world premiere on the program.
According to Radio-Television
Liaison Director Daniel Rose.
"For Clarinet and Percussion”
was written to highlight the talents of percussionist Jan Williams and clarinetist Sherman
Friedland

"Aeolian Harp," a piece written in 1923 by Henry Cowell,
will be performed by Mr. Sahl
inside an opened grand piano.
"Canary," from the suite "Six
Pieces from Kettledrums.” Cho
ros No. Two", and Quatro Episodi" will be performed.
Mr. Allen Sapp. Chairman of
the UB Music Department and codirector of the Center, will dis
cuss the new music form with
program host James Macandrew
following the performances.

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

windy, ethereal effect. The lighting was dim and vague and the
music mild. The second was more
a dance of "experience” performed by three men. The stark spotlights illuminated harsh leaps
and heavy landings and hyperflexed limbs. Miss Anthony made
use of all the dimensions of
space at her disposal in balanced
proportion. She had men moving
in prone position on the stage,
women reaching, leaps, runs,
turns, over the whole available
area. The nature theme was emphasized by natural clinging costumes and bare feet

Last week'S’ election of InterResidence Council (IRC) officers
has been challenged and the entire election was declared null
and void by the Student Judiciary
Elections Court last Monday.
Larry Pivnick, a presidential
candidate had contested the election of Joel Feinman as President on the grounds that he
had received partisan support
from Mr. Gary Roberts, 1965-66
IRC President, Mr. Pivnick had
questioned the entire election,
charging that the election rules
were unclear.

“Threnody,” the final piece was
based on the Synge play, Riders
to the Sea, the story of a mother
Mr. Roberts said that he would
who hail lost one son at sea and
assume “full responsibility for
was reluctant to send another the operation of the IRC elecout. Mary Anthony was moving tion.” According to Mr. Pivnick,
as the mother. She portrayed her “As administrator of the elecforboding of the hungry sea and
tion, Mr. Roberts should have
then her grief at the loss of her
maintained an impartial position
who
son
drowns convincingly in in regard to all candidates.” Mr.
a rolling stage agony. The setting
Roberts had issued a signed stateincluded a fish net hanging and ment to the residents, affirming
boat ropes; the music was rehis active support of Mr. Feinminiscent of impending storm at
man’s candidacy.
sea and fear. The women represented life: they sent the men
Mr. Pivnick asserted that the
off dancing; they were young
rules for the election were not
and could not be overcome. The made to apply to all specifics
men, although joyous on land, and that there are no rules for
realized the seriousness of their
the conduct of the election adbattle with the sea and the fight ministrator.
the impending
they faced —
death. After the death is disThe Student Judiciary Eleccovered, the mother disbelieves
tions Court ruled: “Whereas the
it and has an illusion of a party
functions, procedures, and poliwhere her sons and daughters
cies of the Elections Committee
were happy but in reality she were not established in writing,
fell with the townspeople nothing either in the IRC Constitution
but anger and despair.
or in a formalized set of rules of

The overall feeling of the program was one of synthesis. Fine

choreography, good themes, and
dancers, added techincally to

broader effects. The unifications
of heaven and earth, and completeness of circles seemed to
be prominent themes. The pulling up from the stage and a
pulling down from the ceiling,
the circle of six people acting
in a unit, and turns in circles
created a “wholeness in space.”

!

procedure, prior to the campaign
and were not made available to
all interested parties; and
“Whereas impartiality should
always be maintained by persons
charged with the responsibility
of the supervision of the elec-

tion process;
"It is the opinion of this court
that the entire election of the
IRC of April 14 and 15, 1966 is

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the SPECTRUM
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN
form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday
prior to the week of publication.
Student organization notices are
not accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
Advance registration schedule
for day students taking Millard
Fillmore College Summer Eve-

ning Courses)—students currently registered in any day school
division may pre-register for Millard Fillmore College 1966 summer evening courses during the
week of April 25-28 (Monday
through Thursday) only. Registration materials will be issued
from 9 a m. to noon, and collected
from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.. at the Mil-

lard Fillmore College Reception
Center. 1777 Hayes Hall. Day students may pick up and return ad
vance registration materials at
their convenience during the specified hours on any of the four
days. All courses, regardless of
course number or level, arc open
to day students who have the
standard prerequisites, subject
only to the usual limitations in
class size in certain courses.
Day students who wish to take
summer evening classes, but who
do not register in advance, must
attend the regular registration
for 1966 summer evening courses
which will be held in Clark Gymnasium on Thursday. June 2, from

6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
University College students
(except those on strict academic
probation) the remaining dates to
pre register are as follows:
April 25 through April 29
W, D
B, F
May 2 through May 6
—

—

—

PLACEMENT

ANNOUNCEMENTS
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) will interview
candidates on April 25 and 26

for positions in UNESCO projects in the developing countries
of the Middle East, Southeast

Asia, the Far East, Africa and
Latin America. Interested candidates should inquire at the University Placement Office for further information.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS

April 22

Roche Laboratories

April 25

Wallkill Central Schools

April 26
Erie County

Welfare

Dept, of Social

April 27

New York Life Insurance Co.

CJIBoaJ

There will be a meeting of
the Photography Club today at
4 p m. in Norton 332. Tom Crowly will speak.

Modern Dance Club meets in
Clark Gym Tuesdays at 3 p.m.
Modern Dance Workshop meets
Thursdays at 7 p.m. in Clark

invalid and, therefore null and
void.

conducting elections.

“We recommend that a special
court be established by the IRC
to hear all cases of alleged violations of the election rules as
established by the IRC Election
Committee.”
The IRC Elections Committee,
under the direction of Mr. John
Derbay, has established a formal
set of rules and procedures for

Monday, April 25, from 11 to
12 a.m. and 4 to 6:30 p.m. in
Tower and Goodyear lobbies. Only the original candidates are
eligible to run.

New

elections

will be held

Mr. Roberts said, “The decision
will be appealed to the Student
Judiciary regardless of the outcome of the election on Monday.”

N.LF. and U.S. Viewed As Equally
Hostile by So. Vietnamese Students
WASHINGTON (CPS)
South
Vietnamese students view the
United States and the National
Liberation Front with equal hostility, according to a three-man
team from the U.S. National Student Association which has just
returned from a two-week trip
there.
The delegation was led by Philip Sherburne, NSA president, who
said that four themes seemed to
underlie all of the group’s conversations with South Vietnam—

ese students:
—“a general unwillingness to
be part of any coalition government or to participate in any negotiations with the National Lib-

eration front;

—“a high degree of dislike for
the United States;

-—“a strong feeling that the U.S.
has violated the national sovereignty of South Vietnam;
—“a great desire to have elections so that a national government with some legitimacy can
be formed.”
Sherburne said the delegation
felt the attitude toward the United States was based both on a
general resentment toward all
whites and the “real feeling of
uneasiness and sadness as to what
the American presence in Vietnam has meant for their country.” He cited the effect of large
numbers of American troops on
the nation's economy and the traditional social standards of the
country as two examples.
Continued support of the many
South Vietnamese military governments and a feeling among students that the Ky government
was U.S.-installed has led to the
sentiment that the U.S. has vio-

lated South Vietnam’s national
sovereignty, Sherburne said.
He said that South Vietnamese
students feel that policy for the
country is being made in Washington and not Saigon, and that
they point to numerous state-

ments of President Johnson and

other U.S. officials as their evidence.
Sherburne said that in addition to assessing the feeling of
South Vietnamese students, the
NSA delegation hoped to make arrangements for a suitable exchange visit by South Vietnamese
student leaders.
This exchange trip will not be
possible, Sherburne said, because
the students “we would want to
visit the U.S. won’t be able to
leave at this time.” He said that
the students felt that their own
activities at this point were so
important that they couldn’t afford to leave the country and that
the government was generally
unwilling to have any student
delegation leave now because of
the unstable political conditions.
Sherburne said the team's findings will be circulated in the
form of a report to the campuses.
The report will serve as the basis
for several magazine articles and
a report to government agencies,
he added.

He said the team expects to
make a report to the government
outlining where South Vietnamese students feel U.S. policy has
fallen short and making appropriate suggestions.
Sherburne
suggested that NSA and several
government agencies may discuss
possible projects in South Vietnam, especially in community development.

Schizophrenic And Normal Blood
Difference Sought By UB Team
The possibility that there is
a difference between the blood
of schizophrenics and that of
normal people is under investigation by a UB research team.
Dr. Benjamin E. Sanders, associate professor of biochemistry-

in the School of Medicine and
project director, said that the
team trains male rats to climb
a five-foot rope to get food. The
fastest rats are given injections
of blood plasma or isolated parts
of the plasma from either healthy
people or schizophrenics and are
then timed again, he explained.
Earlier studies conducted elsewhere recorded that rats injected with the plasma from schizophrenics took twice as long to
climb the rope as those injected with “normal” plasma.
Dr. Sanders noted that these
results are not conclusive, as
"our own tests have not confirmed the findings of other investigators." He commented, "the
UB team has not been able to
show a significant difference between the effect of the plasma
from normal donors and schizophrenic donors.”
The findings by the team may
be due to various factors, such
as medication used by schizo-

phrenics and other variables, Dr.
Sanders mentioned.
The research is being conducted under a five-year grant from

the National Institute of Health.

Engineering Students
And Faculty Compete
The Industrial Engineering undergraduate students have challenged the faculty of the Industrial Engineering Department to
compete in an IBM Management

Decision Game.

The Junior class, Senior class,
and faculty will comprise three

independent, competitive teams
(companies).
The game is a computerized
simulation of an economic environment in which the companies
must make decisions regarding
allocating of funds and business
strategy. The goals of each team
will be to develop a long-range

operation plan.

Winners will be announced at
Annual Senior Recognition
Day. April 26
the

�Friddyf April 22J1966

‘

’

SPICTIOM”

Wmmt EM Sherman
Because his film will receive
the wide showing it rightfully
deserves, Pier Paolo Pasolini will
no longer be the most underrated
of contemporary directors. That
distinction now falls on Yasujiro
Ozu. Perhaps now that The Gospel According to St. Matthew has
catapulted Pasolini into the public eye, hjs earlier films will be
shown again, and American audiences will be more appreciative
of Aecatone this time around.

,

Pasolini was the first Italian
director to break away from the
dead-end of neo-realism which
was the great strength, and, at
the same time, the great limitation of the Italian cinema from
1950 to 1960. Before 1960, only
two other film makers recognized
Pasolini for the cinematic master
he was—Jean Luc Godard, who
came to Italy to visit with him;
and Ermanno Olmi, who worked
with him for a time. A decade
before L'Aventura, Pasolini accomplished the cinematic purity
for which Antonioni has received
the credit. While Pasolini worked
quietly in obscurity, Antonioni
was producing garbage like Cronaca di on Amore and Signora
Senza Camel ie.
»

*

*

The photography and the
choice of music for the film are
superb. The shot of Christ walking across the water is reminiscent of Abel Gance’s Napoleon;
the early films of Jean Renoir,

La Bete Humaine

in particular:
and the dream/wish fulfillment
scenes in the films of Jean Vigo.
Musical selections include excerpts from Bach, Mozart, Webern, and Odetta singing Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless
■

Child.

The film is, of course, devout.
be, simultaneously, tinged with irony? Is it per

But mightn’t it

verse or wrongheaded to suggest
that The Gospel According to St.
Matthew is a portrait by Pasolini
of Christ as homosexual? Are the
visions of Christ as presented by
Pasolini—especially the final one

on the cross—the delusions and

hallucinations of a madman? And
would not Pasolini claim that
Christ is immortal precisely because he was mad? Mary, mother
of Jesus, is played by Pasolini’s
own mother. The "narrator’' of
the film never lets the viewer
forget that it is a film within a
film. Can The Word transcend
the celluloid?
Whatever one’s “interpretation”
of the film may be, one clear
fact emerges: The Gospel According to St. Matthew is the only
film about the life of Jesus completely without any trace of sham.
In its simplistic narrative beauty,
it is almost like a tone poem. “A
masterpiece to be seen and seen
again,” say the publicists. For
once, they have got it just about

year.

Bonnie Burke of Alpha Gamthe 1966-67
Greek Panhellenic Scholarship
Award. Correction to last Friday’s Spectrum; Cynthia Oster
is not a member of Alpha Comma Delta, (in reference to winner of drawing.)
ma Delta received

The pledges of Alpha Kappa
Psi will hold a picnic for the
brothers and their dates tomorrow at Akron Park. Sunday, April
24, the pledges will hold a car
wash in the Tower Parking Lot
from 12 to 6 p.m.
Alpha Phi Delta will hold its
forty-fifth annual alumni dinner
dance Saturday at the Charter

House Hotel.
Jean Hoffman, of Chi Omega
the second highest
average of the fall pledge class.
The Social Science Award was
given to honor a senior girl for
her outstanding achievement in
both scholarship and activities.
The officers of the spring pledge
class are: Judy Hart, President;
Jane Moir, Vice-President; Pat
Galante, Secretary; Jessie Newlove, Treasurer.

obtained

Coral Balducci was Queen of
Gamma bhi's Sweetheart Dance.
Tomorrow night, the pledges will
hold a party for the brothers,
at Bosela’s Restaurant on Cleveland Drive at 8:30. The Seventh
Annual Greek Olympiad will be
held at Rotary Field at 1p.m.
°n Sunday.
Kappa Psi will hold

its an
formal dinner dance to
morrow at the Treadway Inn.

nual

Phi Kappa Psi will hold a beer
Party tomorrow honoring its base-

hall team. TKE donated the beer
after losing to Phi Kappa Psi.
The pledges of Pi" Lambda Tao
will sponsor a Clip at Roy Potato's apartment. Tomorrow,

Columbia University chemist
Dr. Gilbert Stork will discuss
“Recent Advances in Synthetic
Organic Chemistry" during the
annual Foster Lectures sponsored
by the UB Chemistry' Department
April 25-29 in 70 Acheson Hall

Dr. Stork is chairman-elect of
the Division of Organic Chemistry, American Chemistry Society
and has served on the editorial
boards of Tetrahedron and the
Journal of Organic Chemistry.

He is also a member of the
advisory board of the Petroleum

Research Fund and has served in
consulting capacities for the Na
tional Science Foundation and
the National Research Council.
Dr. Stork received an award
from the American Chemical Society, The Award in Pure Chemistry, the Baekeland Medal of the
North Jersey ACS Section, the
Harrison Howe Award, and the
E.C. Franklin Award from Stanford University. He was a Guggenheim Fellow in 1959.

The schedule of Dr. Stork’s
lectures is;
April 25—“Enolate Generation

April 27—“Diels-A 1 d e r Reactions with Unsymmetrical Systerns.”
April 28—“The Isoxazole Route

April 26—“Intramolecular Reduction and Hydration of Acetyl-

,0

and Alkylation."

enic Ketones."

Polycyclic Systems,
April 29—"Ncs Syntheses of
Alieyclic Systems."

Skanks Defeated on 'KB'
Sigma Alpha Mu (SAM) beat
the Skanks 50 to 40 in the "Championship Trivia" contest broadcast
last Monday on WKBW-TV.
SAM received a loving cup and
$100 check to be presented to
the C.C. Furnas Scholarship Fund.
The defeated Skanks were pre-

Craft Center Exhibit

The Creative Craft Center will
present a staff exhibit from 8
p.m. to 10 p.m. daily and 1 p.m,
to 8 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays.

Pottery, copper enameling, silver engraving and construction,
wood work, oil paintings, and
pen drawings will be displayed.

sented with a consolation prize
of a submarine sandwich. Each
Skank also received one white
7.35x14 tire, donated by Don Al-

len.

Robert Levitt, Steven H. Sun-

shine, Barry A. Gutterman and

Daniel Alterman respresented
SAM The Skanks are Leon Lewis,

David Bergen, Francine Fischbein
and Sebastian Dangerfield,

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there will be a Drive-in Party.
Ralph Roister has been elected
Historian to replace Paul Lang
who is leaving.
Sharon Nemet of Sigma Delta
Tau obtained the highest scholastic average of the fall pledges.
The annual closing affair will
be held at the Lord Amherst
Motor Inn tomorrow. There will
be a cocktail party before and
a traditional candle-lighting ceremony after dinner.

Lois Hcssinger of Sigma Kappa
Phi obtained the highest scholastic average among senior sorority
women at the Scholarship Tea
last Sunday. The sorority and the
pledge class were honored for
outstanding academic achievement. A mother-daughter weekend will be held this weekend.

Other travelers checks
are every bit as good as
First National City Banks

Applications for the Theta Chi
Trike Grand Prix should be turned in as soon as possible.
Theta Chi sorority is selling
ball point pens and peanuts in
Norton, both for 20c.
Tau Kappa Epsilon will hold
a “Swingin’ Spring" blast at Carpenter’s Hall from 8:30 tonight.

The “Uncalled Four” and the
“Rockin’ Paramounts” will be
playing.

—ISRAEL—
A table will be set up
in Norton Lobby Monday
and Tuesday to solicit
free literature and information on opportunities for study, work and
travel in Israel. Anyone
who has been to Israel
and wishes to help at the
table, call 831-3983 or
831-3887.

THE SPECTRUM
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at 4:15 p.m.

GREEK NOTES

Alpha Epsilon Pi's
annual
pledge party will be held tomorrow night outside of Salamanca.
AEPi won the campus volley ball
championship for the 3rd straight

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By CLARENCE PANTO
EAST LANSING, Mich. (CPS)—
Mcihigan State University last

of the Central Intelligence Agency infiltrated an MSU aid mission in South Vietnam, but school
officials said the five were fired
as soon as their true identity was
learned. MSU dropped the’ program shortly thereafter.
The story was revealed last
week by Ramparts, a liberal,
Catholic, Calif.-based monthly.
The magazine charged that the
MSU project served as a front for
the CIA mission and thereby violated the 1954 Geneva agreements, whch ended the war between France and nationalist Viet
Minh forces.
The program, which was fin
anced by the U.S. government,
cost American taxpayers $25 million, the Ramparts article said.
An MSU spokesman said a figure
of $10 million was closer to the
truth.

The article charged that the
MSU mission helped train a militia for the regime of Premier
Ngo Dinh Diem and financed
guns and ammunitions for Diem’s
civil guard. MSU said the school
trained Diem’s police force only
and set up a civil service program for his government.
“CTA gents were hidden within the ranks of the MSU professors in the Vietnam project,”
the Ramparts article charged.
“The agents’ instructions were to
engage in counter espionage and
counter intelligence.”
Ramparts said Michigan State’s
project showed “the decay of
traditional academic principles
found in the modern university
on the make.”

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ST. LOUIS (CPS)—While fra
ternity discrimination continues
to occupy most of the headlines,
more basic questions concerning
the purpose and future of the
Greek system are being raised
on different campuses across the
country.

A plan to change rushing procedures at Washington University
here has refocused attention to
this point. The administration has
told fraternities they will no longer be able to conduct rush at the
beginning of each semester because of a new freshman orientation program.
Although seemingly a minor
problem—rush is conducted at

many different times of the year
on different campuses—the action
has contributed to “a great deal
of fear and anxiety among fraternities about their future here,”

according to one observer. Many
Greeks feel this is part of a
general plan to eliminate them.
One administration map for the
campus in 1980 apparently shows
classroom buildings where the
fraternity houses are now.
Washington University’s chancellor, Thomas Eliot, is seeking
to raise academic standards (a
large fund drive is imminent); he
allegedly believes the campus academic climate can be improved
by strengthening the dormitory

The opinion also noted the case
of William Worthy who went to
Cuba without any passport in
1961. He won a Circuit Court of
Appeals verdict holding that the
prohibition against entering Cuba

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The decision handed down by
Chief Judge Joseph C. Zavatt set
free three men indicted for organizing a trip to Cuba by 58
students in 1963. despite a State
Department ban on travel to Cuba and a specific order prohibiting the trip.
The defendants were Lee Levi
I.aub, 27. Stefan Martinet. 26,
and Anatole Schlosscr. 28, all of
New York Most of those oil the
trip were students.

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travel of American citizens who
hold a valid passport.

In his decision Judge Zavatt
noted that this was the first time
the ll.S. government had proseeuted citizens of the United States
for having left the country with
valid passports, visited a forbidden area, and then returned home.
“The court finds that Laub and
Martinet departed from and entered the United States bearing
valid passports within the meaning of 'depart', and ‘enter’, and
'valid passport'." the 81 page decision said. Laub and Martinet
'were on the trip: Schlosser only
helped organize it.

"Although they and Schlosser
agreed among themselves to induce others to do likewise, the
agreement and acts do not constitute a crime. If. as the court
concludes, there is a gap in the
law. the right and duty, if any, to
will it evolves upon the Legislative. not the Executive or Judicial. branch of the government,"
the ruling said.

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"If Congress intended to prohibit travel to prescribed areas as
well as prohibit departure and
entry without passports, one may
reasonably wonder why it did
not expressly provide for that,”
the judge wrote.

construction and equipment design.

Dr. Ralph H. Smuckler, acting
dean of MSU’s international pro-

grams, denied the magazine’s al-

legations before MSU officially
acknowledged that the information in the article was correct.

Changes Seen In Fraternity System

In a
NEW YORK (CPS)
ruling that may affect several
cases now in court, a United States
Distirct judge in ISrooklyn declared last week that the State
Department could not restrict the
—

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Five C.I.A. Agents Infiltrate M.S.U. Mission In South Vietnam
week admitted that five agents

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SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

was unconstitutional.

Calendar
April 22-26

system at the expense of fraternities.
An anti-intellectual character
is being charged to fraternities
in other places. A faculty committee at Amherst College came
out with a report last fall which
said in part:
“Few of the fraternities have
any consistent, frequent institu-

tional forms beyond the ‘faculty
cocktail party’ for bringing together work and social life. Even
fewer still have significant programs of independent activities
for exercising the creative, literary, artistic, or intellectual abilities of their members. At least
one fraternity is seen by some
of its members as a happy refuge
from the intellectual, civil, and
moral expectations of the College
and general society. Too often
the exercise of responsibility is
confined to housekeeping, perpetuating the institution through
rushing, arranging for parties,
and defending the fraternity
against a 11 a c k in the student
newspaper . .
Dean of Men William G. Long
of the University of North Carolina has mixed feelings about
fraternities, doesn’t know whether they will survive, and acknowledges that the faculty is becoming
negatively disposed towards them.

And in a now well-known statement, University of California so-

ciologist John F. Scott predicted
last fall that sororities face extinction He contended that they
are too rigidly structured to cope
with today’s highly competitive
campus society.

Chancellor Eliot, however, was
not at all dogmatic in a meeting
with farternity leaders at Washington. He

said that the adminis-

Exhibit: Arts and Crafts Shop,
all day, Norton 231, through May

Meeting; Millard Fillmore College, 4 to 6:30 p.m.. Norton 233.
Saturday 23

Fiesta: International Club, 7:30

p.m. to 1:30 a m., Fillmore Room.
Monte Carlo Night: Tower Residence Hall, 8:30 p.m. to 12:30
am.
Concert; Request night, Meyer
conducting, Kleinhans Music Hall,
Sunday

24

Folk Dancing: 7 to 11 p.m
Norton 344.
Concert: Evenings for New
Music, Albright-Knox Art Gallery,
8:30 p.m.
Monday 25

Foster Lecture: Department of
4:15 p.m., Acheson

Chemistry,

Hall.
Tuesday 26
Varsity Tennis: UB vs. Rochester.
Foster Lecture: Department of
4:15 p.m., Acheson
Hall.

Chemistry,

Lecture: "Industrial Relations'
Professor R. Marshall, 2 p.m,
Norton 234.

ope n-minded

Greeks, acknowledgsame time, that many
members of the faculty were
more hostile.

The chancellor expressed con-

cern over the rivalry between
Greeks and independents on the

campus, terming it potentially
unhealthy. He said that the system would have to harmonize its
activities more with the rest of

the campus.
At least one fraternity man
agreed. Writing in the student
newspaper, Dennis Brophy indicated he thought the system was
being presented with an opportunity for self-analysis.
“For years individual adminisand faculty members have
done little to make us feel wanted,’’ he wrote. ‘'But have we really done all we could to make
ourselves a part of the larger
community? Have we really encouraged each other to take advantage of all the opportunities
on campus to grow as persons—or have we been busy justifying
ourselves by licking Easter Seals
during Hell Week and compiling

trators

GPA’s?

“We say there is more to school
than academics . . But isn’t there
more to fraternities than high
pressure selling of an ‘image’ to
freshmen who often don’t know
what they want, or how to get it?
Isn’t there something more to a
fraternity than the Sweetheart’s
.

Song and a pledge pin?
“If there is, then why don’t
we spend more time looking for
a better approach and defined
set of goals, rather than getting
ulcers trying to save a sacred
cow that quite frankly is starting
to stink up the place?”

Husband-Seeking Coeds Are
In Wrong Place Says Click
,

(ACP) —There’s a widespread
belief on college campuses that
many women students are in
college for one reason
to find
a husband.
According to a study made by
Paul C. Click, author of “American Families," marriage-minded
coeds are in the wrong place.
Click’s statistics show that although! the chances of marriage
for the college-educated female
are better than they were in
1940, chances are still better for
the woman with only a high
school education
The older a man is when he
marries, the study indicates, the
greater age difference between
bride and'groom.
Since the male usually marries
a younger female, he has a wide
market while in college. Since a
woman usually marries up in
age, however, her market grows
smaller.
As a rule, men marry womep
of the same or lower level of
education. In the woman’s case,
the situation is reversed. Also,
the higher the education level,
the greater the importance of
men having higher levels of
education than womqn.
These findings together lead
to this conclusion: extended education and increased age place
—

Friday 22

tration remained
concerning
ing, at the

a woman in a marriage market

in which the number of available older males with as much
or more education is limited.
Because the man cpn marry
down in age and education, the
educated woman faces increased
competition by younger apd less

educated women for the available unmarried men.
The unmarried man with a
high level of education is in the
best position for mate selection.
The woman with the same age
and education, however, is very
limited in her choice.
The study also revealed that in
three-fourths of all marriages,
the bride is younger than the
groom. The bride is older than
the groom in only one seventh
of all marriages.
All these figures seem to indicate that a woman is more likely
to receive a Mrs. degree upon
graduation from high school than
upon graduation from college.

Chancellor Furnas

Presents Degrees

Chancellor Furnas will present
degrees and certificates to approximately 2,000 graduates at
the Spring Commencement Exercises Sunday, May 29, in Memorial
Auditorium at 3 p.m.
Dr. Furnas will deliver his final
commencement address as President before his retirement August 31.

Each student will be allowed
four tickets from the dean of
the school from which they are
graduating.
The Very Rev. Monsignor Leo
E. Hammerl, Superintendent of

the Diocese of Buffalo Schools,
will deliver the invocation and
benediction.

�Friday, April 22, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE THIRTEEN

Statistics For Coming Year Indicate
State Institution Enrollment Increase
WASHINGTON (CPS)
State
and land-grant institutions- report
admission requests are running
10 per cent ahead of last year
and expect to enroll some 20,000
jrrore freshmen this fall.
—

institutions, however,
are sending out less acceptances
and plan to have smaller freshman classes than last year.
Private

instiutions was reported in the
West. The smallest increase came
in the Northeast, with Northeastern institutions less able to accommodate their applicants. Some
75,922 applications were received
for only 23,642 places.

—

These are two trends already
evident about this fall’s enrollment situation.

A survey of selected private and
public institutions by Editorial
Projects for Education showed
that Stanford, Northwestern, New
York University, Johns Hopkins,
Princeton, University of Chicago
and Dartmouth have received
more freshman applications for
next fall than for last but still
have decreased their invitations.
Brown, Harvard, MIT and Swarthmore have received fewer applications this year.
One reason for the reduced
number of acceptances is that
many found their expectations
of last year’s freshman class
size were inaccurate; they ended
up with more students than they
could accommodate. Ivy League
institutions have reported that
another reason they have less
room for freshmen is because
less upperclassmen are leaving
school than is normal out of fear
for the draft, the New York Times
has reported.

This situation helps to explain
several admissions deans
said, the eight Ivy League institutions are filling 9,165 places
for the class of 1970, about 75
fewer than were available last
why,

year.

yet been reached.

feseiiffioud
HILLEL

invited to attend. Reservations
for the Annual Awards Banquet
(April 27 at 6:30 p.m. at the La
Hacienda
3734 Sheridan Drive)
are $3.50 per person and may be
obtained at Newman Hall,

Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
in the Hillel House, with Arthur
Wayne Burke speaking on “Israel
As I See It.” The film No Exit
based on Sartre’s play will be
shown on Sunday, April 24 at
7:30 p.m, in the Hillel House.
Admission to the, movie is free.

—

League

applications

were

down this year, possibly because
high school students are becoming more sophisticated in their
attempts to enter college and are
not applying at institutions where
their chances are slim.
Anchoring the entire admissions picture is an Office of Education projection that fewer
first-time students would enroll
this fall than last. The Office of
Education has predicted that the

Coletta Klug Talks at Annual
Panhellenic Scholarship Tea

INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN

FELLOWSHIP

The Panhellenic Council held
its annual scholarship tea April
17 in the Haas Lounge, Nursing
Department instructor Miss Coletta Klug was the guest speaker.
Ping carnations were presented to the sorority women who
attained a dean's list average
last semester.
Miss Dorothy Haas presented
Bonnie Burke of Alpha Gamma
Delta with the Greek Panhellenic
Scholarship Award for scholastic achievement. It was announced that Sigma Delta Tau pledge
Sharon Nemet attained the high-

The film To Every Creature will
be featured tonight at 7:30 p.m.
in Room 234 at which time election of next year’s officers will
be held. Those taking part in
IVCF’s Community Aid Corp project (Saturday, April 23) must be
at the Child Care Center ready
to paint at 9 a.m, Mr. Clyde Tyson, history professor from Niagara Community College, will
hold a lecture-discussion on “God
in History”, on Thursday, April

28, at 7 p.m. in Norton’s second
floor lounge. Reservations for
the Fellowship Supper must be
made by April 30, by signing the
list in the CRO office.

Dr. Richard E. Walton, Professor
of Administrative Sciences at
Purdue University discusses "The
Behavioral Approach to Research
in Labor Negotiations"

NEWMAN
Newman is sponsoring a social

tonight at 8 p.m. at Newman Hall;

Photo by Anthony

A

/

VA

—

Private institutions also noted
that the percentage of applications had lessened. Last year,
Dartmouth had 11.9 per cent
more applications than in 196364; this year it had 4.8 per cent
fewer applications than in 196465.
The largest increase in appli-

cations for state and

land-grant

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The U.S. Census Bureau estim-

—

THE SPECTRUM

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ates that there are approximately
221,000 fewer 18-year-olds this
year than last. Also, there are

Last year, when the number of
18-year-olds in the country was
3.7 million
approximately one
million more than in 1964
and
when the number of freshmen in
the nation’s colleges and universities increased by more than
218,000, applications at state and
land-grant institutions increased
by 34 per cent. This year’s increase is only 10 per cent.

-

•

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fewer college freshmen and high
school graduates.

Former President of the Panhcllenic Council Cind Perl announced the new Council officers:
President. Christa Ulbricht; First
Vice - President, Elaine Greenberg; Second Vice President,
Claudia Elliott; Secretary, Pat
Miller; Treasurer, Janet Leslie.

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The projection for 1965 was
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for next fall is 1,430,000. Of this,
964.000 will enroll in public institutions while the private institutions expect to handle 466,000 students.

Walluk

honored for attaining the high-

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The pledge class of Sigma
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pledge class average and the
sorority received the Rose Bowl
Scholarship Award for the highest overall average. Sigma Kappa
Phi member Lois Hessingcr was

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baby boom enrollment will begin

to level off this

Jan populates the Fillmore Room
Photo by Almn Gruber

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The BPE survey also noted that
Ivy

The picture of admissions at
public institutions, however, is
still cloudy because most continue to accept applications on into
the summer and the final application deadline at most has not

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Manhattan Wexler, M. &amp; Sons
Queens Village - Jaeger Jewelers

■
■

Ridgewood - Isaacs
Ridgewood ■ Frederick Stadtmuller
staten Island (Great Kills) •

Silversmiths
Paul’s Jewelers
Sag Harbor Fritfs Jewelry Store staten Island (Port Richmond)
Saratoga Springs - Paul E. Eddy
Russell-Reed. Inc.

�CT R

PAGE FOURTEEN

oCetterA

to

the Editor

(Cont

'd

from

Pfr

5)

Peace Corps Exam Monday

Callan’s Argument Is Weak
TO

THE EDITOR

Mr. Callan, in his column of
19, persists in confusing
the concept of human rights and
freedoms with his medieval outlook towards individual responsibility. He says that the rights
of the unborn child and of society
are protected when mothers are
deprived of the right to “take
knives and kill their children,"
and equates the protection supplied by law enforcement bodies
to all citizens. However, his argument is weak in several places.
First, we must assume that—the
life of the mother is at least as
important as that of the child,
and while the birth might not
lead to the death of the mother,
it might (if the child is illegitimate) figuratively cause the
mother to die by bringing untold
degradation into her life, causing
loss of family, friends, job, as
well as greatly reducing her opportunities for future marriage.
April

The possibility also exists that
the pressures brought upon the
woman plus the personal guilt
feelings stimulated by outside
pressures will lead her to mental
instability, perhaps culminating
in insanity or suicide.

Because the conservatives are
in favor of government expenditures (and I assume that Mr.
Callan falls into this category),
then they should realize that by
prohibiting legalized abortion the
government is forced to spend
much more money than it should
for—orphanages and for personal
relief. The government is frequently forced to pay for the
hospital expenses as well as support the mother who is unable to
work because of her child. In
large but poor families, the last
unwanted child is often “the
straw which broke the camel’s
back," and the family is forced
to turn to the government for
additional revenue.

Last but not least, we must consider the fact that the U.S., likie
most of the world, is, or will
soon, feel the full effects of

overpopulation. Japan has proved to the world that an effective
abortion program can be run by
the government, and this is one
of the reasons why Japan today
has easily the highest standard
of living in Asia.

It must also be considered that
most abortions are not considered
murder in a legal sense, for they
generally take place before the
unborn child becomes a fetus, but
when it is an embryo (a child
before the fourth month of uterine development). Thus in law
cases involving an accident between a pregnant woman and an
outside party, the second party
is not pressed with charges of
murder if the embryo dies as a
result of the accident.
—Elliott Podwill

20 to 35?

SINGLE?

JOIN THE SWING TO

THE JET SET

FRIDAY, APRIL 22
SPECJAL GUESTS
NURSES OF BUFFALO GENERAL and
STUDENTS OF UB LAW SCHOOL

JET SET MIXER DANCES
9:30-1:30
2704 Main (near Amherst)

Every Friday Nile

Hallmark Manor

—

—

Athletics vs. SDS
TO THE EDITOR
Mr, Taylor, in your editorials
and Reflections' columns, you
have often spoken of UB as an

"educational factory” with knowledge being doled out as if everyone were on an assembly line.
You have also talked about the
ultimate destruction of our individuality as a result of this
evil bureaucratic factory which
is turning out a highly standardized product. Granted there is
some truth to the idea of UB (or
for that matter any other large
university) as an “educational
factory.” However, my differences with you center around the
means with which you propose to
eliminate these ends, not that
these evils do not exist to some
extent. It is here where your ideas
have been warped by the pseudoliberalism you profess.
More specifically, I am referring to your condemnation of
major intercollegiate athletics in
the Spectrum editorial of Febniary 4 and your negative attitude
general. That you advocate the

ultimate elimination of the above
cannot be denied.
I support the
tion, that both
legiate athletics
ternities are an

opposing contenmajor intercol-

and national fraintegral part of
any university. Without delving
into all of the many and varied

reasons why this is so, the most
significant comes to mind is the
simple fact that major intercollegiate athletics and national fraternities do more to stimulate interest and participation in activities and events at UB than any
other groups on campus, thereby
making a sizeable contribution
toward the elimination of your
so-called “educational factory."

Mr. Taylor, it seems to be an
almost hypocritical position to
assert that one of the ways to
rid UB of this educational production line is abolish two of the
interest groups which do most to
foster “school spirit.” While dogmatically maintaining this position you reveal your true lack
of insight into the real situation
at UB, as well as disqualifying
yourself from speaking for the
student body, a point which I
shall return to.
With regard to the Spectrum
editorial policy it is obvious to
most readers that you, Mr. Tay
lor, are using the most influen
publication on camlial s
pus as an outlet for your own
highly controversial ideas. I will
confine my criticism to one
grossly inaccurate assertion which
is stated or implied week after
week in your editorials. Mr.
Taylor, when you say ‘the students are a little tired of shelling
out to support teams . . .” as in
the previously mentioned edi-

torial, you are flagrantly abusing your right as editor by «ssuming that you speak lor the
student body. How you can make
the assumption that your opinions are congruent with those of
the student body, is completely
beyond comprehension. It is indeed a fact that you do not even
speak for your own editorial
board as evidenced by the opposing editorial in the Bull Psn
written by Sports Editor Steve
Shuelein. When was the last time
you called an editorial bboard
meeting to discuss current editorial board policy? Mr. Taylor,
it is an undeniable fact that the
editorials appearing in the Spectrum represent your views and
yours alone.

Mr. Taylor, a far greater majority of the student body on the
UB campus is composed of those
people who attend football games,
and belong to and associate with
national fraternities than those
who associate with S.D.S. It is
your privilege as editor of the

want in the editorials, but it is
not your right to pretend that
you speak for a majority, or even
a large minority of the student
body. Mr. Taylor, in the future
when you express your opinions
on the editorial page let it be
known that they are yours and
not those of the student body.

Alan Scholom

Descend From Your *Ivory Tower*
TO THE EDITOR

a Senior, I have always
read the Spectrum and I have
been frequently impressed by
many of the inciteful editorial
remarks made by Mr. Taylor, I
have respected your opinion, Mr.
Taylor, but after reading your
editorial comment concerning
the Greek System, I find that
I am unable to remain passive
and absorb your personal and unfounded prejudices simply because you are editor-in-chief. I
can only say that you have displayed your lack of "intellectual
objectivity” which I always felt
you valued when dealing with
subject in your editorials.
As

I do not feel that I have to
defend the Greek System to you.
but I would suggest that you descend from your "ivory tower

office . . .) and become
familiar with the system you
chose to label trivial. Why not
learn more about the system
you so unjustly and rashly attack? I have never seen you
meeting members of the Greek
System at the Tables. I also
missed you at the past Pan Hellenic Scholarship Teas honoring
Sorority women. Before calling
the Greek Organizations a system which “brutalizes or thwarts
the individuality of its adherents” or label it “an evil and
anti-intellectual
institution” I
suggest you review the academic
records of the Greek Members.
I would like to invite you to the
Penn Hellenic Scholarship Tea
on Sunday to see the individuals
who comprise the Greek System
as they are honored. You will
also have the opportunity to hear
the opinions of educators con(your

cerning
contribution of
the
Greek Woman to the University.
I am sorry you were unable to

see the faces of the children at

the Buffalo School for the Retarded when the Sisters of Sigma
Delta Tau (a large trivial club, in
your estimation) planned a party.
I also fell certain that the patients of the Veteran’s Hospital
enjoyed the perofrmance that the
Greek Members offered when
they sang the songs from Greek
Sing of this year.

1 have only touched on a few
events in the calendar for the
various Greek Organizations, Mr.
Taylor. If you regard philanthropic projects, scholarship and a
general enthusiasm for campus
events as trivial all I can say is
I feel you are the one who has
been sadly brutalized.
—Diane Phyllis Sezzen

TTriiTaiiortmanToFfinirnatlonally-advartited
products courtesy of famous manufacturers.
You will receive such products as these*
—

Pond’s Dreamflower Talc
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Pond’s Angel Face Cream Make-up
Fresh-Start by Pond’s
Macleans Tooth Paste
Lustre Creme Shampoo
Neutrogena Soap
Deep Magic Moisture Cream

Alka-Seltzer

The University Bookstore will contribute I Sc of your donation to the Capen
Fund.

�Friday, April 22, 1966

Exhibit on the Function
Of a University Library
Is Part of Library Week
In the Library vestibule there
five cases that contain exhibits explaining the behind the
scene operation of a university
library. The exhibit, a part of
National Library Week activities,
demonstrates the selection, purchase, and preparation of books
before they go on the shelf. Pictures illustrate each step in the
are

process.

The second display focuses on
rare books. Its purpose is to acquaint the student with the acquisition and expansion of such a
collection. Thus it contains books
on the subject of rare books.
This past week there were two
films in Norton of the humanities series sponsored by the Library Association. According to
Curator Mr. Sy through these activities' it is hoped that the student will gain a mature appreciation of the Library as a center
for research and the furthering
of knowledge rather than a book
mausoleum.

Sally’s steady
a gallant young nipper
Drank his Colt 45
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from her slipper.
Then one day, by gosh!
He tried her galosh
And caught his hiustosh

When you can't
afford to be dull.
sharpen your wits
with NoDoz tm

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CORRECTION
The picture which appeared in last Tuesday’s
Spectrum was a scene
from Patch of Blue.

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from Pg. 16)

Urich reacted to seeing Dick Ashley for the first time, it
does little to detract from his importance to next year’s
team. A strong adherent of the passing game, Urich
has stationed Ashley at the
same split end position that
Snow held down. After the
first weeks of spring practice removed any suspicions
Urich might have had about the films being tampered with, the UB Athletic Department insured
Ashley’s hands at Lloyd’s
of London for a premium
comparable to those that
cover Charlie Gogolak’s
foot, Liberace’s fingers, and
Betty Grable’s legs. Well,
maybe close to those premiums anyway.
Urich has said, “1 can’t
say anything definite yet,
but if things work out the
way 1 ho P e - we '» KO with
nifif ASHLEY
acuicv
DICK
an offense of the N()tre
Dame variety." If this vision unfolds the way Urich
hopes, passes to Ashley should be the key to the new
offense.
Urich, however, doesn’t exactly consider Ashley another Snow yet. “He’s big, has excellent moves, and
real good hands,” says the Head Coach, “but he doesn’t
have real good speed.” With 17 receptions for seven
touchdowns and 349 yards as a sophomore last year,
however, it appears that the 6-2, 205-pounder can do
nothing but improve.

While there seems to be little doubt that Ashley
can catch, there is a question as to whom his pitching
mate will be. As spring training began, the tentative
depth chart showed Rick Wells and Nick Capuana as
the men to beat out for the quarterback position. At the
moment, neither of these men is contending for the job;
Wells is still hampered by the leg injuries suffered
against Richmond last fall and has been shifted to
halfback duty, while Capuana has been busy doubling
at tailback and defensive back.
The two men vying for the job now appear to be
the one-two signalcallers for last year’s Freshmen, Mick
Murthat and Dennis Mason. Murtha, a three-sport performer at Union-Endicott High School, has been steadily
improving during the Spring session.
Mason, a Buffalo product, was given about the
same odds of becoming starting quarterback as the No.
2 horse was of winning a race on the Mobil Red Horse
Derby this week. The Bishop Fallon alumnus, however,
came into prominence with a brilliant performance in
last Saturday’s squad scrimmage, completing 8 of 13
passes and running for a 34-yard touchdown.

In other developments, Urich is still considering
using certain players both on offense and defense. Captain Bill Taylor and Ted Gibbons, for instance, have
sparkled on both offense and defense this spring. “I
don’t know if they or any other player will go both
ways as yet,” Urich replied, “but if Gibbons and Taylor
are not only the bes tplayers at their offensive positions,
but also at certain defensive positions, then I would
rather go both ways with them than have them on the
bench part of the time, whlie an inferior player is in.
It’s too early to tell yet, however,”

Earn $20-$60 Weekly
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The indefatigable Urich and his staff, meanwhile,
have been working themselves to the bone. Not only is
an 8 a.m.-lO p.m. weekday routine, but most of the
weekend is occupied with high school recruiting, a
scrimmage and films. “I don’t count the hours we
work,” commented the Miami (Ohio) graduate, 1 “but
we only get Sunday afternoons off."

Start Now
by Calling

Urich also expressed satisfaction at the recruiting
program which “has been working out as well as we
had hoped.” Urich’s deep black eyes reflected resent-

RON HOLTZ
or

831-3610

(Cont'd
...

Urich said, “Mason had a real fine afternoon Sat-

The SPECTRUM

RAY VOLPE

bull pen

urday. He really responded well under pressure. I’d
still have to say Murtha has the inside track at this
point, however.”

Selling Ads for

ADV. MGR.

PAG! PIPTHN

SPECTRUM

Selling Ads for the
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,

ment, however, at the loss of Grand Island phenom
Scott Herlan to Syracuse. Although the boy had committed himself to UB last month, Urich tried to shrug
off his loss as “one of those inevitable things” that happens in the college recruiting rat-race. “We’ve had eight
to fiffteen boys from Ohio, Michigan, Pennsylvania. New
England and New York here every Saturday, so there
should be a lot of keys in the next two weeks,” Urich
concluded emphatically.
And spring training is hardly three , weeks old. Whew!

�Friday, April 22, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

¥

X

� §!PIl(g!P!ai0M
—£==/

—

THE BULL PEN

Diamonditien Shell RIT
on

an error by Ron Leiser in the
fifth, but it was Ron’s great
stop of an eighth inning ground
ball which saved UB’s shutout
. . . Good pitching by Rutkowski,
Pirozzolo and Tim Uraskevitch
has given Coach Jim Peelle solid
depth behind his starting pitchers
Don Potwora and Ron McEwan
. . . Darkness halted the game after eight innings . . . UB will play
RIT once more this season in
Rochester.

by steve schuelein

Ashley Holds Key
To UB Grid Future
According to the calendar, September 17, the date
of UB’s football opener at Kent State, still looms a very
distant twenty weeks away. But according to the more
pragmatic calculations of Head Coach Doc Urich, only
five weeks—two more of spring practice and three of
the pre-season variety—remain before the former Notre
Dame assistant makes his debut as Bull mentor.
During this relatively brief span, Urich will have to
come to grips with such interesting details as the types
of offense and defense and the starting lineup he plans
to use. Having already witnessed three weeks of spring
drills, Urich testifies that they Ijave been very revealing
but a number of question marks still persist.
The UB coach said, “Naturally I was darn anxious
to begin spring drills to find out what I’d be working
with. So far I’d have to say I’m satisfied in some cases,
disappointed in others.”
With his usual frankness Urich continued, “Overall team speed must be improved.” After a moment’s
hesitation Urich pointed to the positive aspects of the
workouts by replying, “The boys have a good attitude.”
He singled out Dick Ashley, Captain Bill Taylor, Ted
Gibbons, Dan Sella, Tony Miceli, Nick Capuana and Jim
Barksdale for special praise.
Although Urich has not as yet committed himself to
any special offense for next fall, there is little doubt as
to what Plan A at the moment is.
Two years ago at Notre Dame, a pair of Californians
name&lt;nty&gt;hn Huarte and Jack Snow warmed the hearts
of miltfgBa of American football fans by lifting the Fighting Irish from the football scrap-heap to within two
minutes of an undefeated season.
After the rags-to-riches resurgence of the once almightijlrish, Ara Parsephian—the new South Bend
coach-iurms given more publicity than John Goldfarb
would ever have dreamed of.
It’s a well-known fact that Parsephian was given
most df the credit for making the Notre Dame machine
click. It’s a less-known fact that a 35-year-old line
coach fcy the name of Doc Urich transformed Snow into
a split ejid and then developed him into an All-American.
And without Snow’s sudden blossoming, the 1964 version of* Horatio Alger myth might have laid a big egg,
Ara oev*o Ara.
CfilpRrtnly the memories of Snow couldn’t have faded
too deeply into the recesses of Urich's mind. And when
the good doctor moved his black leather bag from South
Bend to this campus in March-—not knowing exactly
what to find—could you imagine the euphoric feeling
that must have enraptured him when he stumbled
through last fall’s UB films to discover a comparable
model of the Notre Dame end.
Picture a small, dark room with six men staring intently at a portable movie screen from their chairs. The
only noise comes from the whirring of a projector as a
dozen eyes are glued to the football films on the screen.
Suddenly Doc Urich, seated in the center of the
group, jumps up and screams, “Snow!!”
‘‘Take it easy, Doc,” comes the assuring reply from
Bill Dando, ‘‘I hear it snows all the time up here in
March.”
"No, no, no,” echoes the head coach, an actave lower with each negation. "On the screen, don’t you see?”
“Oh, that,” shrugs Jerry Ippoliti, “well, it’s sort of
a dirty screen.”
With his hands cupped over his eyes in sheer disbelief, Urich tries again, "Not outside. Not on the screen.
On the field
The field? interjects Bob Deming reminiscingly,
"We didn’t have any snow against Colgate—maybe this
80-hour week is beginning
Enough, enough,” shrieks Urich, “There's nothing
wrong with me. Now just look at those films. See that
guy with the "87” on his back, making those great
catches. Doesn’t he remind you a little of Snow?”
Oh. Ja-a-a-ack Snow.” chrip five voices in enlightened harmony.
Although this scene probably isn’t exactly the way
”

”

(Confd on Pg. 15)

Box Score:

DOUG LONG
By RICH BAUMGARTEN

The UB baseball team racked
up its third victory in three starts
at Clark Field Monday as the
Bulls shut out Rochester Institute
of Technology, 11-0. UB won this
one early as the Bulls scored three
runs in the second inning, and
then added eight more in a wild
■third inning which saw two RIT
pitchers give up five straight
walks with the bases loaded. All
■together the Bulls had 15 walks
combined with their ten hits to
overpower RIT, as the boys from
Rochester never did get going.
Doug Long and Ken Rutkowski
had the big sticks for UB. Long
continued his hot hitting with
three hits, while Rutkowski, who
had two doubles, also turned in
a fine pitching performance. Rutkowski pitched five innings of nohit ball, striking out eleven while
walking only two. Relief pitcher
Dick Pirozzolo, the big right-hander who also plays tackle on the
football team, took over in the
sixth inning and shut out RIT the
rest of the way. RIT’s Bill Cocco
and Don Serth ruined UB’s bid
for a no-hitter with base raps in
the seventh inning.

BASEBALL NOTES: UB’s string
of 23 errorless innings was broken

ab r h bi
Thompson 2b 4 0 0 0
Urquart ss
30 0 0
Rignel
0 0 0 0
Cocco cf
4 0 10
Serth c
4 0 10
Kreubel rf
20 00
Cross If
3 0 0 0
Finrler lb &lt;2 0 0 0
Holberfon 2b 2 0 0 0
Covless c
1 0 0 0
Bacon p
00 0 0
Zimmer p
2 00 0
Foster
1 000

The fencing tournament was
also held this week. The bouts

took place last night in Clark
Gym. The names of the winners
will also be published in next
week’s edition.

The track meet
the final
event on the intramural calendar
will be held Monday, April
25, at 4 p.m. All official intramural entry blanks must be sub-

....

UB Trackmen
At Brockport
The UB track team, after open-

ing its season against Colgate
at Hamilton on Wednesday, will
travel to Brockport tomorrow to
face the Golden Eagles.

(distances) and Gene Zastawrny
(hurdles) provide a powerful nucleus. Also expected to help out
are Jim Fix in the dashes, Dick
Kennedy in the pole vault and
Joe Waitword also in the pole
vault.

With the addition of basketball stars Art Walker (sprints)
and Bobby Thomas (high jump)
to the roster, the depth of the
strengthened
team has been
somewhat. 235-lb. football standout Ted Gibbons is also slated
to handle the shot put assignAll entries for today’s sports
ment at the end of football practrivia contest must be banded
tice.
to the sports desk of the SpecWith the arrival of more seatrum by Monday. Prizewinners
sonable weather, the team has of and answers to today’s quiz
been rounding rapidly into shape. will appear in next Friday’s paDistance-runners Dick Genau and per.
Bob Stephenson, hurler Larry
Nauham and weight-thrower Mel
1. What did Bobby Jones affecSpelman have been impressive tionately nickname his putter?
in workouts thus far.
2. Who quarterbacked Army
Nevertheless, the lack of depth
of the team could prove decisive during the heyday of Glenn Davis and Doc Blanchard?
against the likes of Ithaca, Cort3. What current major league
land and Brockport—schools that
don’t find it necessary to ask pitcher was called “The Tomato’’
students to come out for the by his former teammates?
4. Who was the only boxer to
team.
defeat Gene Tiinney?
Bob Boozer’s perennially power5. Who kicked the winning
ful Eagles anticipate another fine points
in the first professional
season. Depth seems to be Brockfootball championship?
port’s strongest point. Return6. Who played second base for
ing lettermen
Hal Rothman
the pennant-winning Philadelphia
(sprints), Gary Westerfield, John
Izzo (sprints), Fred Apgar, Jay “Whiz Kids”?
7. What horses won the first
Kearney (weights), Ron White
race of the season at Batavia
Downs and Fort Erie Jockey Club
this spring?
8. This San Francisco Giant
farmhand had a farm club
including such notables as Sargent Shriver
sprung up for
May 3. Reservations must be
him last year with the motto
by today in the intramural of“Is there really a
?”
fice.
9. What professional football
player is called the “Catawba

TRIVIA

Tennis Team
Wins Again
The UB tennis team ran its unbeaten string to three Tuesday,
defeating Gannon College, 8-1,
at the UB courts.

—

—

mitted

by today.

Events to be held are: 75-yard
dash, 100-yard dash, mile run
300-yard shuttle relay, 440-yard
shuttle relay, shot put, broad
jump, and high jump.
The intramural awards dinner
will be held in Norton Union on

ab r h bi

2 112
110 2
2 0 00
2 112
0 0 00
4 10 1
Grad c
0 00 0
RutkowskI p 3121
Wiser
00 0 0
Pirozzolo p
10 10
Long 2b
4 13 2
Pusateri cf
2 10 0
Gerlnger If 4 2 10
Shaw 1b
4 2 11
28 0 2 0
29 11 10 11
RIT
000 000 00- 0
Buffalo
038 000 Ox—11
Called, darkness.
E-Leiser. DP-RIT 2. Left-RIT 7,
UB 13.
2B —Rutkowski 2, Cocco.
IP H R ER BB SO
Bacon (L)
1*6 1
3 3 7 0
Zimmer
5Va 9
8
8
8 5
Rutkowski (W)
5 0
0 0 2 11
3 2 0 0 1 5
Pirozzolo

INTBAMUBALS

The volleyball playoffs for the
campus championship were held
this week, with the Joques, APD,
Sig Ep and AEPi, the champions
of their four respective leagues,
vying for the crown. Results of
the championship will be printed
in next Friday’s issue.

Leiser ss
Buchta 2b
Morelli of
Hansen rf
Raczka rf
Duprey c

—

—

Claw"?

10. Who were the two Seton
Hall stars indicted in the collegiate basketball scandals of
1961?
Name
The reason that this week’s
questions are so much easier
than those of last week is because the Spectrum hopes to receive entries with at least some
correct answers on them.
Last week
unhappy as we are
to announce it
we were unable to give away any prizes because none of the entry blanks
had any correct answers on them.
Better luck this time.
Last Friday’s answers:
L Clint Hartung 2. Crispus Attacks, Indianapolis 3. The Randolph Shuffle 4. Alphonse Halimi
5. Elmer Valo 6. Dickie Volo 7.
Bobby Clatterbuck 8. Maturity,
determination and the will to
win 9. Jerry Dorsch 10. Charlie
Silvers.
—

—PICNIC—
There will be a picnic
for graduate students
April 24 in Akron Falls
Park at 1 p.m. Tickets
may be obtained in 311
Norton from 9-1 daily
for 25 cents.

—

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DRAFT

-----

-JSTATE

UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

t—_

THE

BALCONY'

COMMITTEE
(See Page

VOLUME 16

(See

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1966

Pace 6)
NO. 40

Meyerson Appointment
Confirmed By Trustees
IRC Elections Are Held;
Candidate to Contest
Procedural Validity
By TERRY SEAL

The official results of the InterResidence Council officer election
held on April 14 and 15 are as
follows: President—Joel Feinman
026 votes, Larry P i v n i c k 221
votes, and 47 write-ins; VicePresident—Alan Freid 691 votes
and 68 write-ins; Secretary—Judy
Snyder 436 votes, Sharon Shulman 351 votes, and 30 write-ins;
Treasurer—-Alan Sturtz 580 votes
and 178 write-ins. There was a
total of 1083 votes cast in the
elections, indicating that about
45% of the resident students
voted.
Larry Pivnick, the defeated

JOEL FEINMAN
Elected IRC President

“SDS is not only celebrating
May Day because of its tradition
as a working class holiday and

its association with various protest and minority groups,"' Mr.
Gardner explained, “but also because it marks the first anniversary of the local chapter of SDS

However, Mr. Pivnick has filed
his complaint with Mr. Roberty
Eddy, Chairman of the Election
Court of the Student Judiciary.
Considering Article 14 of the
I.R.C. Election Rules (“All violations of election rules shall be
referred to the I.R.C. elections
committee.”), Mr. Pivnick states
that “since the election committee of the I.R.C. at the time of
the election existed on paper but
not in practice, and since the
complete list of the elections committee was not made public at
any time, and as there is no written provision for the appointing
of members to this committee at
the time of the election, we have
referred our protest to the Election Court of the Student Judiciary for consideration.”
Joel Feinman, the winner of the
I.R.C. election for president, said
that he had no comment to make
until the nexaot nature of the
election complaint was made public.

150 UB faculty and student members expresed their concern for
the war in Viet Nam.
The program will also feature
a display of photographs of vari-

our May Day demonstrations.

Mr. Meyerson will assume the
post September 1 as successor to
Dr. Clifford C. Furnas. Dr. Furnas has reached mandatory retirement age and will step down
August 31.

Currently the Dean of the College of Environmental Design at
Berkeley, Mr. Meyerson will be
the second president of the State
University of Buffalo and the

tenth chief administrator of UB.

MARTIN MEYERSON, President-Elect

President- Elect Meyerson:
An Interview With WBFO
“I am a great believer in a
mixed economy both generally
and in the academic world,” President-elect Martin Meyerson commented in a telephone interview
Friday with WBFO.
"Buffalo has a unique opportunity in that it can combine the

latitudes and the innovations of
a private university with the
sense of reaching large numbers
of the public university,” he said.
When questioned about the role
of the alumni in the state university system, Mr. Meyerson answered that he believes they
should play “a tremendous role
in all aspects. Alumni are expected to be helpful and to contribute,
but the university ought to offer
something more than sports
events and dinners to its alumni.”
He noted the desirability of pro-

viding a life-time educational opportunity for alumni.

“I believe in all the kinds of

challenges the university can provide to old grads to help them
keep up with world affairs and
their particular specializations. It

all goes back to the mixed ap-

proach in public and private,” he

The State University at Buffalo
Council nominated Mr. Meyerson
to the State University Board of
Trustees on April 6. Previous to
the nomination, an elected faculty committee appraised more than
130 names suggested by the Council. the University administration,
alumni, members of the faculty,
and educational advisory foundations. A Council committee and
a faculty committee jointly considered the leading candidates,
and the Council committee then
made the final recommendation.
Mr. Meyerson accepted his appointment and stated, “I look
forward to working with the faculty, the Council, and other members of the university community
in planning and implementing a

future educational porgrom which
I expect to be the most intellectualy stimulating anywhere.”
Commenting on his successor,
Dr. Furnas said, “His great capacities and national stature are

well-suited to our needs.”

added.

ORIENTATION
Training session for
Freshman Orien t a t i o n
Group Leaders will be
held Tuesday, April 19,
at 4 p.m. (originally
scheduled time is changed) in Norton 240. Attendance is mandatory.
—

Mr. Meyerson commented that
after meeting some of his future
colleagues at UB he believe them
to be “a most enthusiastic group
of people who are also deeply

attached to

the future of the

university.”
Concluding the conversation,
Mr. Meyerson pointed out that he
hopes “to continue building on
past tradition and perhaps to create some new.”

—

Recognition Day Dinner Tonight
Retiring President Clifford C.
Furnas will be honored at the
“C.C. Furnas Testimonial Dinner”
tonight in the Statler Hilton. The
dinner will be one of thirty
Alumni Club dinners held
throughout the country in celebration of “C.C. Furnas Recognition Day.”

at UB.”

SDS was formed a year ago by
four graduate students in sociology, Richard Salter, William Marrow, John Coe, and David Gardner, who deplored the lack of
an on-campus organization concerned with the war in Viet Nam,
according to Mr. Gardner.

He pointed out that the organization’s first activity was the
“March on Washington" in which

The appointment of Mr. Martin
Meyerson to the UB Presidency
was finalized by the State University Board of Trustees Friday.

candidate for president, has filed
a complaint concerning the election. I.R.C. President Gary Roberts, stated that “all violations of
election rules and all complaints
concerning the election are to be
referred to a Residence Election
Board established by the Director
of Housing,” He also stated that
“the composition of the Residence
Election Board will be announced
Monday” &lt;April 18).

SDS to Celebrate May Day;
Marks First Anniversary
May Day will be celebrated by
Students for a Democratic Society
with an informal evening of
speeches and folksinging in Norton Union, announced SDS member David Gardner.

To Assume Post
September I

A reception will be held at 6:30
p.m. in the Statler Hilton Terrace Room, followed by a dinner
in the Golden Ballroom.

CLIFFORD C. FURNAS
Retiring President

Mr. Henry T. Heald, former
President of the Ford Foundation

and former chairman of the New
York Committee on Higher Education, will deliver the keynote
address, Mr. Heald is one of the
authors of the Heald Report
which first recommended the establishment of a University center in upstate New York.
Former UB alumni director Mr.
J. William Everett will be the
“Voice of UB" at the dinner.
Everett is a UB graduate and is
currently public relations director of the Erie County Savings
Bank. Mr. Everett has devised a
nation-wide telephone hook-up

which will enable people at the
dinners throughout the country to
hear the proceedings of the Buffalo testimonial.
The testimonial address will be
delivered by Professor John Horton, who has been chairman of
the UB History Department since
1948. He will represent the faculty, administration, and student
body. Dr. Horton has served as
mace-bearer at the UB commencement exercises for many years.
Friends, alumni, and educators
have been invited to attend the
affair.

�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, April 19, 1966

Storing Contrasts Negro Leadership
Professor Herbert G. Storing
presented a comparison of the
Negro leadership of Frederick
Douglas and Dr. Martin Luther
King last Friday. While idealizing Douglas, the 19th century
abolitionist, he discussed the responsibilities of the partisan interest to the entire political
system
Professor Storing’s talk was
sponsored by the University of
Chicago Alumni Association,
where he is a member of the

Department of Political Science.
Storing discussed the problem
of keeping the integrity of one’s
moral position safe while not
making oneself irresponsible in
the political situation. He said
that King denies the obligation
to obey unjust laws because he
believes that cooperation with an
unjust system makes the oppressed as evil as the oppressor.
However, Storing mentioned
that Douglas accepted the more
comprehensive goal of statesman-

ship, compromise, and moderation in the quest for justice. He
added that Douglas recognized
the fact that the “parts’’ of the
political system must take some
responsibility for the whole system although they may make demands on it. He noted that Douglas saw non-cooperation as a useful tactic, but not as a moral
device for eliminating political
problems,
Professor Storing concluded
that Douglas saw the interrela-

International Club Fiesta Includes
Variety Show, Exhibits, Foreign Food
The International Club will
hold its annual Fiesta Saturday,
April 23, at 7:15 p.m. in the
Conference Theatre and Fillmore
Room from 7:15 p.m. to 2 a m.
Admission is $2 per person.
The Fiesta will begin with a
variety show featuring dances
and songs ranging from Greek
Pouzouki music to Moroccan belly
dancing.

Guests will be able to sample
foods of many lands. Latin Amer-

ican Arrozean Polio may be mixed
with Greek Karondato and Hungarian Pishinger.

The Fiesta will feature booths
containing exhibits of native arts
and crafts run by International
Club members in national costumes. There will be continuous
dancing to the music of many
nations
“This promising affair is one
more way in which the International Club continuously explores

the depth of human feeling and
promotes sincere friendships and
cheerful comradeship,” according
to outgoing president Mike Nicoiau.
Participating countries are: Israel, Indonesia, Spain, Greece,
Italy, Latin America, India, Pakistan, Austria, Arab Countries,
Balkan Countries, Japan, Ireland,

Scotland, Ukraine, Lithuania,
and Scandinavian
Countries.
Hong Kong,

tionship between the good of the
ing™ and the good of the whole
American community. He noted
that some of today's leaders are
aware of this. King urges the
Negroes to lay the ground for

.

later reconciliation when protesting lessor Storing commented
.
,
that todays leaders, however,
seem reluctant to shoulder the
responsibilities of politics.
..

A

,

.

,

,

Young Dem's Will Discuss
Mock Convention Tonight
The UB chapter of the recently
organized New York State College
Young Democrats (CYD) will hold
a meeting tonight at 7 p.m. in
264 Norton to discuss the statewide mock gubernatorial convention. The convention will be held
in Albany this June.

Newly elected officers of the
club are: Richard Kaplan, president; Martin Jaffe, vice-president;
Sylvia Feldman, secretary; Steven
Feigin, treasurer; and Steven
Fein, member-at-large Political
science professor Everett Cataldo
will be the faculty advisor.
Mr. Kaplan said that CYD will
assist Democratic Party campaign-

ing, serving as an independent
group and formulating policies
and criticisms on campus.

The club, which is open to fultime undergraduates, was formed
to “increase the level of political
awareness and participation
among students,” according to
Paul Nussbaum, regional coordinator of CYD.

Mr. Nussbaum said that proactivities of the
club include working for a nonjected future

partisan

Constitutional Convention for New York, and participation in a Washington legislative
seminar program.

Vista Treats Volunteerism'
At Panel Discussion Friday
Mr, Thomas Powers, National
Recruitment Director for VISTA,
held an open discussion on “Volunteerism” with SDS leader Rich
ard Salter and SNCC field organizer Leon Phipps last Friday.

Mr. Powers said that Vista attempts to “educate the individual
to act together with members of
his community to create the indigenous leadership necessary for
social change.”
“In SDS community organizing
projects,” Mr. Salter commented,
“we don’t feel that we are fighting poverty, but power. We question whether these individuals are
not full-fledged citizens because
of themselves or the power struc-

ture.”

“Instead of putting more patches on a bad tube, we should ere-

ate conditions for a new tube
so that people can grow,” he

added
A UB student suggested that
the poor do not participate because they feel they have already
attempted and failed. “They view
present institutions as imprisoning them,” he noted.

Mr. Powers commented, “Peo-

ple who know the machinery of
protest don’t see the institutions
as penal institutes. That is why
we (VISTA) are there—to teach
them how to articulate their complaints so that they can function

without the volunteer.”
Leon Phipps of SNCC said that
he felt' VISTA and other similar
projects “are good if they stay
in the community for tour or five
years, instead of two or three
months.”

Weekend Queen Campaign
Will Be Judged Today
Everybody's talking about it. Everybody's doing it. Operation Match. It's camp.
It's campus. It's the modern way to meet. It whammo's blind dates.
It started at Harvard. The original Operation Match—featured in TIME, LOOK,
and the coming May GLAMOUR. Already there are over 100,000 ideal dates in
our computer's memory bank. Now's the time to line up your Spring Fling.
Let our IBM 7090 Computer (the world s most perfect boy/girl matcher) select
5 ideal dates for you—right from your campus area. (Now a gal can really choose
the kind of guy she wants, not just wait and hope he comes along I)
Just send us the coupon below ... we'll send you the Operation Match Quantitative Personality Projection Test Questionnaire.
Answer the questions about yourself, what you're like, and what you like. Return
the questionnaire with $3.00. Then we put our 7090's memory bank to work. It
reads out the qualifications of every member of the opposite sex in your college
area, and programs 5 or more ideal dates for you. You receive names, addresses,
and phone numbers. Guys call the gals. You're just a telephone apart.
Also, your card is kept continuously active. You receive as many dates as the
7090 finds matches. The sooner you apply, the more dates you may get.
Let the 7090 take the blinds off blind dating. Get modern. Get electronic. Get
set quick with your ideal dates.
HI*I..»,1I,HI.J
,

'*

t

I1

|,|

■

NAME

I

ADDRESS

I

I want to help stamp

SCHOOL
CITY

STATE

ZIP CODE

i OflEMTlOni gc5 MdTCH
Compatibility Research, Inc.

•

•

••■•a.a.

/

11:00 p.m.

Skits will be shown by the candidates Wednesday and Thursday
from 11 a.m, to 1 p.m. A fashion
show will be held Friday in the

2

671 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 021 39

Millard Fillmore Room at 3:30

p.m

Other activities planned for
Spring Weekend include performances by Nina Simone, the Tokens and the Laurentian Singers.
A formal dance will be held, at
which the Queen will be crowned. Stunt Night and an Olympic
Competition will be held.

Naval Academy Grade Practices
Are Causing Faculty Departure
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (OPS) —An
assistant professor of English is
leaving the United States Naval
Academy because of the school’s
admitted policy of changing
grades.

1I

Dear IBM 7090
am 17 or over (and 27 or under) and
out blind dates. So mail me my questionnaire. Quick!
...

The Queen Campaign for
Spring Weekend (April 28-30) begins this week. Outdoor campaign
judging will be held today at

Richard C. Vitzhura is the second faculty member in two weeks
to draw attention to the academy.
Last week. Kent Ponder, an assistant professor of Spanish,
charged that his contract was not
being renewed because he had

refused to

approve a passing
grade for a student who scored
16 per cent on his final written
examination. The student, the son
of a high ranking naval officer,
received the passing grade anyway.

The departure of the two faculty members is only a small part
of what has become a public

dispute over the Naval Academy’s
grading practices. The dispute,
in turn, reflects a deep concern

among some faculty members
over how swiftly the academy

can, or should, meet changing

educational demands.

A self-study, released by the
academy last week, emphasized

that the need to curb academic
failures made it impractical to
“base grade distributions solely
on scholastic competence.” The
report regretted that the limit
on failures has led to “coasting
on the part of a significant number of middle C average midshipmen.”

After the report was publicized,
Draper L.
Kauffman said that as of next
September the academy will drop
the grading controls.

however. Rear Adm.

�Tuesday, April 19, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

Graduate-Faculty Committee Considers
Withholding Grades From Draft Board
And Direct Action' Against Deferments
Teaching assistants at a meeting of the Graduate-Faculty Committee on the Selective Service
(GFCSS) last Thursday discussed
the “degrading and debasing ef-

fects” of the student deferment

test and considered refusing to
hand in grades to the Office of
Admissions and Records.

The GFCSS proposed that instead of submitting the required
IBM cards to the Office, grades
be given to the student to be
handed in at his own discretion.
The Committee said that this
action would be taken if the Student deferment is continued, preventing the Selective Service use
of student’s grades. Action on
this mater was postponed until
the next meeting April 26, pending further research.
The GFCSS approved a motion
to prepare for “direct action” or
civil disobedience if their demands for abolishment of the
Student determent would not be
met. A sit-in was suggested.
When the committe was formed on March 31, 1966, a policy
statement was issued, declaring:
“the military, through the Selective Service, is undermining
the autonomy of the University
by establishing for the University
the definitive qualities for intellectualism and intellectuals, using the coercive device of the H-S
deferment . . . grades and the
test are not valid measures of
.
student worth
the entire
system of student deferment is
discriminatory, creates anti-intellectualism, and isolates the most
articulate portions of society from
the war. Because of these degrading and debasing effects, unworthy of the universal principles
of human justice, principles which
in spirit are American, the student deferment must be abolished.”
The committee announced that
this policy statement will be presented to Dr. Furnas as an “ultimatum” within the next week.

Graduate School, said, "The quotation which appeared in the New
York Times stating that graduate
students in subsequent years
would have to continue to make
the 80 score to qualify for 1I-S
deferment is in error.” He said
that the requirements for graduate deferment depend upon where
a student is in graduate study.

vent the 12 hour load, proposed
to state merely that the student
currently pursuing what for
him is a full time course of instruction leading to his degree.'
Ultimately, this is a matter be-

is

twen

you and your draft board.'

Replying to a question concerning the rationale for university

involvement in

the

deferment.

Mr. Michael emphasized it is
the student’s responsibility to see
that he obtains a draft deferment
. . . the only thing that is automatic is a change in status. He
added, “the Graduate School will
not release any information with-

Mr. Michael said that he was unable to answer, suggesting that
Dr. Furnas or the new president

“The widely accepted 12 hour
load,” Mr Michael continued, “is
too restrictive. It does not do
justice to the fact that each graduate student has a tailor made
program for himself. The Graduate School, in an effort to circum-

someone is not committed to

out your request.”

be consulted. However, he commented, “the university's job is
educating, not protecting the student.”

Mr. Michael suggested that if
an

educational deferment and thinks
it is wrong, he should refuse to
abide by it. He pointed out, "if
you really want something done
about this, you should go further .
.

AM&amp;A’s

ADAM, MILDRUM A ANDIRSON CO.

.

£

Responding to a question, Law-

rence Michael, Professor of Eng-

lish and Associate Dean of the

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Recent model. Call 885-2498.
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OPENING TOMORROW
University Suburban
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MADEMOISELLE CUSTOM BLENDING
HAIR PIECE CENTER

MEET MISS MICHELE

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known hair stlyist, who will be at the
Opening to personally advise and assist
you.

Let Miss Karen or Miss Linda, trained
stylists, custom blend and style your new
Mademoiselle Hair Piece.
Stop by A. M. &amp; A’s. Mademoiselle Hair
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have a lovely hair piece custom blended
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Department C 5. Box 50, Gardena. California

�Tuesday, April 19, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Editorial Comment

.

.

JAMES CALLAN

.

It used to be fashionable in certain circles of the
faculty and administration, prior to November of 1964,
to say that U.B. was going to be “the Berkeley of the
East”. Now that it is clear that Martin Meyerson, exChancellor of Berkeley and champion of administration
domination under Clark Kerr, is going to head this campus, that may be exactly what will happen.
THE PROBLEM OF PARTICIPATION
Around this time of year, there used to be any
number of bitter and amusing struggles in the Student
Senate and Union Board to see who was going to “take
over” the various committees that use so much of the
student’s money every year to “supplement” the curriculum. This year, however, these committee chairmanships
are going begging. These chairmanships, to say nothing
of the positions open as delegates to the National Student
Association Congress, offer positions of responsibility
and power to particular students, as well as allowing
the student body at large to have more than a small say
in the determination of their own affairs.
To say that student autonomy is slipping through
our hands by default is accurate, but finally it begs the
question, because apathy is, in itself, a kind of protest.
Union Board and the Student Senate are themselves to
blame, in great measure, for the general apathy that
makes important posts in Student Government go unfilled. The “sand-box” atmosphere that has surrounded
both the Senate and Union Board is eventually taking
its full toll in student unconcern. The apathy of the
student body toward “important” things like student autonomy is not born completely of stupidity and ignorance
—it is also born out of a genuine sense that these things
really “just don’t matter”.
It is hard to say at this late date what could alter
this sad and self-destructive state of affairs. Perhaps
the only thin# that can change it now is an influx of
intelligent and articulate students into the vacuums of
student power and responsibility on this campus. Perhaps
then the inarticulate protest of apathy could be rechanneled into more productive channels.
FILMS ON CAMPUS—A SECOND LOOK
This paper carried an editorial some months ago on
the sad condition of the cinematic arts on this campus.
Since then, there have been major improvements in the
situation, although these improvements still leave worlds
to be desired. Perhaps the most exciting development
(on paper, at least), has been the development of a
weekly student news reel, shown With the Conference
Theater Films. Credit for this program goes almost exclusively to Marty Sadoff who engineered the scheme
and managed to swing backing for it.
The first news reel was, unfortunately, technically
poor, a reminder of Ed Ilerlihv at his very worst, but
the fact that it appeared at all is indication that this
university community is capable of supporting an exciting
and growing program in film. Also, the Student-Faculty
Film Club has produced one film already, and is currently
engaged in filming a second to be released soon.
There are still major drawbacks to the serious study
and production of films here, not the least of which is
the clumsy selection of films for the Conference Theater
and the series in Diefendorf, but things are definitely
looking up, and those who worked to make it possible
deserve hearty congratulations.

.

.

the right

.

Mr. Robert McCubbin and Miss
Janet Shapiro, among many others no doubt, didn’t think much
of my column on abortion a while
back. Neither letter really merits
a reply, as neither was a real
reply to what I had written, but
I’ve got nothing else to do and
besides, it might be fun.
First, let’s take Mr. McCubbin’s
letter of April 12. His irrationality (stupidity?) may be excused;
the fact that he failed either to
read or to understand my column
is excusable; but what is inexcusable is that he pretends his letter
is a response to my column. What
am I talking about? Just this—
He disagrees with my concluding
statement; “.. . manifest evidence
shows that abortion is not always
moral, and hence is never moral.”
He thinks all he has to do is
disagree, and that’s it. Which goes
to show that he did not read the
column—that statement was a
conclusion, derived from certain
premises in the column in an
orderly and structural manner—it is not a basic tenet of rational
thought for which I offer no

defense. If my conclusion is erroneous, then so is the logical
flow or one of my premises. To
attack the conclusion without citing the error that led to that conclusion is ridiculous. I challenge
Mr. MoCubbin to find the error
in my reasoning (while he's at it,
I challenge him to structure his
letter in a logical manner).
As for his “proof” that I know
nothing about morality because
I think mothers ought to take
knives and kill their chidlren . . .
no comment necessary.
Miss Shapiro is a different

oCetterA
TO THE EDITOR

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

JEREMY TAYLOR

Business Manager

RAYMOND D

VOLPE

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff —Loretta Angelina. Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen Green.
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab,
Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman.
Eileen Teitler. Nancy Toder. Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg

Feature Editor
Staff—Bonnie Bartow.

Audrey Logel.

Stott—Mike
J.B

Sharcot

JOHN STINY

Ron
Bob Martin,

Castro.

Ellsworth.
Suzanne

Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons. Barbara Loeb.
Rovner. Martha Tack, William Weinstein.

STEVE SCHUELEIN
Farbman. Bob Frey.

Sports Editor
Mike Dolan,

Steve

Scott

Forman,

Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Staff— Joanne Bouchier, Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman
Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Staff —Carol Becker, Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern, Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer,
Claire SJiottenfeld. Susan Zuckerberg

Staff—Terry
Mancini

Angelo,

Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
Audrey Cash. Pat Rosenfeld, Steve

Silverman,

Joseph

Photography Editor

EDWARD JOSCELYN
Staff—Don Blank. Peter Bonneau. Joseph Feyes, Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber.
Marc Levine. Ivan Makuch. Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk. Susan Wortman.
Robert Wynne

Circulation

Manager

Faculty Advisor
Financial

EDITORIAL

Advisor

DIANE LEWIS
IRENE WILLET

In the April 8 edition of the
Spectrum, there appeared 2 letters concerning the “incidents” at
Lafayette Square, The first, written by Bob Witnauer and 8 others
who were there, attacked the
truthfulness of the Spectrum report. It is interesting to note that
these charges were not denied by
the Spectrum or by Mr. Wolkenstein. Instead, they chose to reply
to our letter which condemned
anti-Semitism and Fascism and
suggested that SDS and the Spectrum condemn Communist totalitarianism as well This the Spectrum evidently refuses to do and
instead condemns us for “Redbaiting”.
We believe that Red-baiting
consists of labeling a person a
Red who is not. However, to identify a Communist is not Red-

any more than it is
baiting
“liberal-baiting” to call Hubert
Humphrey a liberal or “conservative-baiting” to call William Buckley a conservative. While it may
be argued that it is far worse
to be a Communist than a liberal
or a conservative, we consider
that to be their fault, not ours.

After listening to Mr. Wolkenstein and representatives of
Youth Against War and Fascism,
we consider it overwhelmingly
evident that they are totalitarian
Communists,
Interestingly, Mr.
Wolkenstein in his letter does not
deny it, nor did Joel Myers in his.
If anyone else wishes to, we
would be glad to debate the point.
Until then, we as American citizens believe that it is our duty
to bring this, the real issue of
the controversy, out into the

Ato

\OK1UxIKL
Pwess

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

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

It is alleged that we wish to
deny a person “his right to exercise and practice his beliefs.'’
This is false. We simply stated
that those supposedly dedicated
to a “democratic” society should
not ally themselves with those
who, wherever they take power
(Russia, China, Hungary, E. Germany, Cuba, etc.), ruthlessly destroy the liberties of the people.
Thus CVV and YAF exclude as
members a 11 Fascists, Communists and Racists. (A policy which
is also used by such liberal organizations as NAACP, CORE,
ADA, ACLU). We believe in letting the totalitarians speak, but
speak for their own organizations,
not ours.

Steve Sickler
Frank Klinger
Dr. Marvin Zimmerman
Donald Rich

open.

Prism Distorts
April 13, 1966 edition in an interview with me.

1 strongly believe in the freedom of the press which through
its freedom will produce the
truth. However, when an editor
uses the press to distort or mis-

represent

truth, the basic
rights of an individual arc invariably stepped upon. Such has
been the case with the editor of
the Prism, Alan Goklin in the
the

Mr. Golkin has taken fragments
mmy interview and distorted
them in such a way as to misrepresent my candidacy for IRC
president. Upon reading this “Impartial” statement, a student
would be strongly inclined to vote
for my opponent, Mr. Joel Fein■man. While such a procedure is

fro

permitted in editorial statements,
it is not a news article. Mr.
Grolkin never used lies in his report, but just as seriously used

half-truths.
Thus

through

his

distorted

sense of objectivity, Mr. Golkin

has violated the number one objective of a good journalist, to
report the truth.
Larry Pivnick

Revolution Vs, Evolution
TO THE EDITOR
I share Mr. Jaffe’s your un-

easiness concerning indiscriminate emotive use of such terms
as "fascist,” “communist," “depraved ultra right,” etc. MeOarthyism should taught us the
danger inherent in hysterical misuse of such terms. For example,
are all those who oppose the
Spectrum's stand on Vietnam, by
definition, “depraved ultra right,”
opposed to the civil rights movement, dupes and/or fellow travelers of the Klu Klux Klan and
the American Nazi Party?

In a positive vein, I believe the
signers of the April 8 Letter to
The Editor intended to suggest
that the ground rules for dissent
and consent on Vietnam be defined and confined to those who
accept and to those who wish to
work for a change within the
existing institutions of our society. That is, those who are opposed to totalitarian goals or
totalitarian means. Such a suggestion was motivated by a desire to eliminate bigotry and to
clarify just what the object of
dissent is. The suggestion for a

clarification of ground rules can
be accepted or rejected but let
us know who rejects them and
why they are rejected. Above all
let us refrain from ad-hominum
arguments and such ad-hominum
editorials as that of April 12 attacking Dr. Zimmerman which
simply obfuscate the entire issue.
If, however, the issue is not
Vietnam, but revolution versus
evolution, then perhaps the time
has come to make this very ex-

plicit.

Lenore H. Banks
Graduate Teaching Fellow

A New Idol

DALLAS GARBER

POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

the Editor

—

TO THE EDITOR

SPECTRUM

to

—

Labeling Is Not *Red-Baitirig’

)

THE

case.

I don’t know if she read my
column or not—she didn’t say
anything about it. First, let me
say that I don’t care less about
a baby after he’s born—it’s just
that maltreatment of a child is
such a blatant and widely-recognized evil that it doesn’t require
column space. No, we should not
condone child-beating, ill-managed houses for orphans, etc., but
killing off the baby before he
has to face these hazards is not
the way to go about it.
From mine eyes flow tears of

red when I hear how “the innocent victim of social pressures
lies mutilated or dies” and about
the “fear and shame she is forced
to endure” and the “butcher . , .
who has robbed her of up to
2,000 dollars.” All I can say is
that this “innocent victim” is a
killer and deserves everything
she gets
shame, mutilation,
death, the works.
The rest of her letter can be
summed up as follows: anti-abortion laws are immoral because
it’ll be done anyway with more
innocent bystanders getting hurt.
Well, maybe she’s got a point
there, maybe while we’re at it
we ought to retract the laws
against murder—that way professionals could be hired who would
see that only the intended victim
got hurt. We wouldn’t have to
pay all that money for a police
force—everyone would be better
off, except of course whoever got
murdered. The point is exactly
the same with respect to abortion,
Miss Shapiro—everyone would be
better off, except of course whoever got murdered.

TO THE EDITOR
Now it is quite apparent that

the trustees of this University
have adopted Berkeley, California, as their idol. Can they hope
to have that University’s greatness without its scandal, strife

and ugliness? Even Berkeley's
own administrators have admitted (Newsweek, March, 1965) that,
with twenty-six thousand students, they had allowed that University to get far too large. Twenty years are all it will take the
Big Campus Neurosis to make

the State University of New York
at Buffalo into another-University
of California at Berkeley, and,
whafs worse, to turn most of the
Township of Amherst] into another City of Berkeley!

BUFFALO NO'

(ERKELEY

�M

Tuesday, April 19, 1966

*

poo*

~

*

SPECTRUM

PACE FIVE

Buckneil Annual Challenge Conference
Seeks to Provide Awareness of Issues

LEWISBURG, Pa.—Susan Son- internal mechanisms of art detag, Walter Kaufmann, Otto Luenvelopment, which thereby creates
ing, and Ad Reinhardt, noted aua void in his comprehension of
thorities on various art forms, the problems and issues of towill be presented to the Buckneil day’s art.
University academic community
By formulating a program induring the University's annual volving the above mentioned
Challenge Conference April 22 speakers, the Challenge Commitand 23tee seeks to introduce the student
This conference, initiated and to the possibilities of approachadministered solely by students ing the new art within the conof the Buckneil University Chal- fines of the creator’s interpretalenge Committee, is planned each
tion of his media and the viewer’s
year with the purpose of provid- critical awareness
ing a greater awareness and unThe creator’s interpretation of
derstanding for the University art will be represented by Otto
community of vital problems in
Luening, composer of electronic
the changing world.
music, and Ad Reinhardt, noted
The 1966 Conference will be contemporary artist. Critical outpresented in conjunction with the looks on art in the conference will
theme, “The Artist and His Crit- be presented by Susan Sontag,
ic: The Context of Contemporary critica and novelist, and Walter
Art.” Approach to the theme will Kaufmann, noted professor of
be made through an analysis of philosophy.
the apparent lack of unity and
Currently co director of the
purpose in the American college
C o 1 u m b i a-Princeton electronic
student’s appreciation of today's synthesizer program, Otto Luenart forms.
ing was born in Milwaukee, Wis.,
Exposure to the new art may
and studied in Zurich and Munnal provide the time for suitably
ich. He has been executive diinterested persons to fully relate
rector of the Opera Department
this new experience to the stu- of the Eastman School in Rochesdent’s larger academic and cultur- ter, N.Y., and director of the
al understandings. Despite his Rochester American Opera Comeducational pretensions, the col- pany,
lege student shares in the generLuening has taught at the University of Arizona, Bennington
al public’s exclusion from the
"

-

On Campus
(By the author

College, Columbia University and
Middlebury College, and has con-

ducted the New York Philharmonic and Philadelphia and Boston Symphony Orchestras. In 1930
he was granted a Guggenheim
Fellowship, and his opera Evangelina won the David Bispham
Medal in 1953.
Ad Reinhardt who attended
Columbia Colege’, was an instruetor at Brooklyn College and has
taught Oriental art history at
Hunter College. His paintings,
described as “Zen-like,’ are characterized by muted, monochromatic hues and symmetrical forms,
and have earned him the reputation as being one of the foremost contemporary artists. He regards black as the “ultimate" in
art, and has produced almost exclusively in this color since 1953.
Susan Sontag, writer, literary
and drama critic, film aficionado,
and proponent of a “new sensibility” *ln today’s cultural existence, is the author of the recently
published and enthusiastically received book, Against Interpretstion and Other Essays, in which
she gives the impression, as a
recent issue of Saturday Review
asserts, “that she knows a lot
about some things and as least
as much as any other authority
(Cont’d on P. 6)

1

of “Rally Round the Flag, Roys.'",

“Dobie Gill,*,’’ etc.)

ROOMMATES REVISITED
This morning’s mail brought a letter from a student at
a prominent Western university (Princeton). "Dear Sir,”
he writes. “In a recent column you said it was possible to
get along with your roommate if you try hard enough.
Well, I’d like to see anyone get along with my roommate!
Meryis Trunz (for that is his name) practices the ocarina
all night long, keeps an alligator, wears knee-cymbals, and
collects airplane tires. I have tried everything 1 can with
Mervis Trunz, but nothing works. I am desperate, (signed)
Desperate.”
Have you, dear Desperate, really tried everything? Have
you, for example, tried a measure so simple, so obvious,
that it is easy to overlook? I mean, of course, have you offered to share your Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades
with Mervis Trunz?
To have a friend, dear Desperate, you must he a friend.
And what could be more friendly than sharing the bounty
of Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades? Who, upon enjoying the luxury of Personna, the nickless, scrapeless, tugless, hackless, scratchless, matchless comfort of Personna,
the ease and breeze, the power and glory, the truth and
beauty of Personna—who, I say, after such jollies could
harden his heart against his neighbor? Nobody, that’s who
not even Mervis Trunz—especially not today with the
new Personna Super Blade bringing us new highs in speed,
comfort, and durability. And here is still a further bonus:
Personna is available both in Double, Kdge style and Injec•

—

tor style.

r

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No, dear Desperate, your problem with Mervis Trunz is
far from insoluble. In fact, as roommate problems go, it is
pretty small potatoes. Compare it, for example, to the classic case of Basil Metabolism and K, Pluribus Ewbank.
Basil and E. Pluribus, roommates at a prominent East-

ern university (Oregon) were at an impassable impasse.
Basil cottld study only late at night, and E. Pluribus could
not stay awake past nine p.m. If Basil kept the lights on,
the room was too bright for E. Pluribus to sleep. If E. Pluribus turned the lights olf, the room was too dark for Basil
to study. What to do?
Well sir, these two intelligent American kids found an
answer. They got a miner’s cap for Basil! Thus, he had
enough light to study by, and still the room was dark
enough for E. Pluribus to sleep.
It must be admitted, however, that this ingenious solution had some unexpected sequelae. Basil got so enchanted

with his miner's cap that he switched his major from 18th
Century poetry to mining and metallurgy. Shortly after
graduation he had what appeared to be a great strokeof
luck: while out prospecting, he discovered what is without
question the world's largest feldspar mine. This might have
made Basil very rich except that nobody, alas, has yet discovered a use for feldspar. Today Basil, a broken man,
squeezes out a meagre living as a stalagmite in Ausable
Chasm.
Nor has E. I’luribus fared conspicuously better. Once
Basil got the miner's cap, K. I’luribus was able to catch up
on his long-lost sleep. He woke after nine days, refreshed
and vigorous —more vigorous, alas, than he realized. It was
the afternoon of the Dean's tea. E. I'luribus stood in line
with his classmates, waiting to shake the Dean’s hand. At
last his turn came, and K. I'luribus, full of strength and
health, gave the Dean a firm handshake—so firm, indeed,
that all five of the Dean’s knuckles were permanently fused.
The Dean sued for a million dollars and, of course, won.
Today E. I’luribus. a broken man, is paying off his debt by
walking the Dean’s cat every afternoon for ten cents an hour.

H r, the makers of I'ersonna blades and the sponsors of this
column, will not attempt to expertize about roommates,
but ive irill tell you about a great shaving-mate to Personna
—Hurma Shave / It soaks rings around any other lather it
comes in regular and menthol.
*

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(Cont’d from Pg. 5)
about everything else." She is
considered one of the leading
"avant-garde" critics, and is credited with being the first to discuss Camp with any 'serious’ intent in her “Notes on Camp" in

the Fall, 1964, Partisan Review.
A native of Freiburg, Germany,
Walter Kaufmann is currently
professor of philosophy at Princeton He is a graduate of Williams
College and received a Ph.D. in
1947 from Harvard. Dr. Kaufmann
has been a visiting professor at
Cornell, Columbia, The New
School, the University of Michigan, and the University of Washington, and studied in Germany
for a year under a Fulbright
grant. Professor Kaufmann’s publications include Existentialism
from Doostoevsky to Sartre, Cain
and Other Poems, From Shakespeare to Existentialism, Faith of
a Heretic, Nietzsche, The Portable
Nietzsche, and Critique of Religion and Philosophy.
Anyone interested in attending
the Conference should contact the
'Bucknell University Challenge
Committee, Lewisburg, Pa.

im

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Film Committee to Show 'The Balcony'
In Conference Theatre This Weekend
A pretty girl in 12th century
armor lifts the visor to accept
a light from Whistler’s mother.
A blonde wearing jodphurs, riding boots and an inadequate vest
applies, nailpolish to Cleopatra's
toes. On the floor, a brunette in
black bra and girdle works at
something she is fashioning from
tinkertoy parts.
These girls work in an establishment run by Madame Irma
(Shelley Winters), in The Balcony.
The house is actually a house
of illusion, a huge converted
sound stage, equipped with backscreen projection, photo murals,
electronic sound effects, exotic
costumes, and a staff of specialists headed by Madame's secretary, Carmen (Lee Grant).
The clientele is composed of
small time losers with vast imaginations: the milkman who
longs to be a general (Kent
Smith);
the gas company employee with a yen to be a Bishop
(Jeff Corey); the accountant who
becomes chief justice (Pet?r
Bronco) for a time, and a price.
The movie is adapted from the
play by Jean Genet. Director Jo-

Slide Rules
Drafting Sett
Drafting Supplies, Etc.
Ilaaealar and Maaaealar

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___

A Scene from "The Balcony"

seph Strick explains, “Basically,
it’s merely the launching site for
the unusual plot. Irma’s establishment is more a place of illusion,
a storage warehouse for dreams,
than a brothel”

Poet Robert Creeley has accepted a full professorship at UB,
according to an English Department announcement.
Department spokesman Gary
MacArthur commented, "Robert
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Creeley is a great poet. Any
university would be proud to
have him as a member of its
faculty.”

reading and discussion with writers in Pakistan sponsored by the
State Department.

Mr. Creeley is the author of
For Love: Poems 1950-60 and The
Gold Diggers. He will tentatively
be teaching an undergraduate
course in modern poetry and a

seminar in 20th century litera-

According to an English Department notice, Mr. Creeley was
awarded a Rockefeller Grant in
Writing this year, as well as a
Guggenheim Fellowship in Poetry
(1964-65) and the D. H. Lawrence
Fellowship (1960).

Mr. Creeley is presently a lecturer at the University of Mexico.
He will join the UB faculty for
the fall term, following a tour of

He has published his works in
magazines such as Poetry, The
Nation), and New Directions Annual. Mr. Creeley has published
a novel entitled The Island.

ture.

Tower Holds Monte Carlo Night
Tower Residence Hall

will hold
Monte-Carlo Night
Saturday, April 23 in the Tower
Cafeteria from 8:30-12:30 p.m.
its

',&lt;1
11U

classical Creek
Kepi searchinf; for

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annual

Roulette wheels, black-jack
tables, dice games, and horse
wheels will be set up in the East
Dining Room, while the Private

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objects unique.
They caused him to snicker
Except Coll Malt Liquor—
So he sat down and
drank his critique!

m

The Balcony will be presented
by the Film committee in the
Conference theater this weekend,
Showings will be continuous from
6 p.m. For further information
contact the Norton Ticket office.

Creeley Is Named Full Professor
By University English Department

Hundredsjoj^temsJ
�
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A professor of

Tuesday, April 19, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

Room will have a “night club
atmosphere.”

Radios,

stuffed

animals,

and

pen-andpencil sets are among the
prizes which will be awarded to

“students with the greatest win-

nings.”

Music will be supplied by a
band and entertainment will take
place during band intermissions.

Weekly Calendar
April 19-22

Wednesday:

Tuesday

Movie: Night

Theatre.

&amp;

Fog, Conference

3 to 6 p.m.

Lecture; M/Sgt. Duncan “I Quit!”
7 to 11 p.m.. Milliard Fillmore

Room.

Colloquium; Marketing Depart
ment, 11 to 12:30 p.m., Norton

234.

Thursday:
Movie: The Balcony, Conference

Theatre.

Spring Weekend Queen Judging:
11 am.

Spring Weekend Skits: 11 to 1
p.m., Conference Theatre.

Play: You Can't Take
You, Studio Arena
through April 21.

Seminar; History of Logie and
Science Club, 8 p.m., Norton
335.

It With

Theatre

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�Tuesday, April 19, 1966

Students And Faculty
Reelected to National
Dental Honor Society
Seven UB students and four
faculty members of the School
of Dentistry have been elected
to membership in the Lambda
Lambda Chapter of Omicro Kap
pa Usilon, a national honor society of the dental profession.

Elected students from the graduating class of 1966 are: Anthony
E. Argentine, Leo R. Cacciotti,

Richard ,M. Constant™, • Russell
J. Nisengard, Barry F. Wood,
Louis D’Andrea, and Paul E.
Gould.
Elected faculty members are:
Dr. H. Gordon Cheney, Dr. Alan
J. Drinnan, Dr. Edward A. Garguilo, and Dr. Harvey S. Johnson.

An installation banquet honoring the new members will be
held Thursday, April 21, at the
Brookfield Country Club.
To be elected to membership,
a student must be in the upper
one-fifth of his class for the entire four-year course of instruction and must possess qualities
for future growth and achievement. Faculty membership is
achieved through service in professional teaching, scientific contributions to dentistry, or community service.

Jazz Trio to Perform

In Fillmore Room
The Union Board Music Committee will present the New Jazz
Trio in “Jazz on a Wednesday
Afternoop” Wednesday, April 20
from 3-5 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room.

SPECTRUM

PACE SKVCN

Regents Member at University of Maryland
Resigns to Protest Communist Speakers
BALTIMORE, Md. (CPS)
A
33-year veteran of the Board of
Regents of the University of
Maryland has resigned her post
in protest of the board’s policy
regarding Communist speakers on
the Maryland campus.
—

Mrs. John L Whitehurst said
in a letter to Maryland Governor
J. Millard Tawes that she was
quiting because the board had
gone on record as opposing a
speaker ban law then pending
before the state legislature.
The bill was never reported out
of committee before Maryland's
Legislature adjourned a week
ago. Had it passed, the bill would
have required the governing bodies of each state school to “announce and apply a firm rule

prohibiting any Communist sympathizer from speaking or participating- in any program" on their
campus.

Six large veterans groups in
Maryland immediately went on
record supporting Mrs. Whitethe only woman ever to

serve on the Maryland regents.
The group released a statement
“to focus attention on the deplorable lack of understanding
displayed by the board of regents.” The statement said "it is
certainly regrettable that more
members of the regents have not
attained your (Mrs. Whitehurst’s)
stature . . . and they will stand
by while the insidious Red propagandists undermine our educational system.”
Signing the policy statement
for their groups were the commanders of the state’s American
Legion. Catholic War Veterans.
Disabled American Veterans. Jewish War Veterans, Veterans of
Foreign Wars, and Veterans of
World War I.
The original legislature resolution was also prompted by these
groups. Maryland Jewish War Veteran Commander Meyer Sokolow
said He said the groups would
continue to push for a speaker
ban and “we’ll be right back
there (the legislature) next time.”
The events that led to Mrs,

Whitehurst’s resignation began on
March 25 when the speaker ban
question was discused at a regents meeting. The bill pending
before the legislature was condemned by the regents, the lone
dissenter of the action being Mrs.
Whitehurst.
"Why shouldn't we keep them
(the Communists) off our university campuses?" she asked the

regents. "They’re winning every
day of the week somewhere in
the world, and now we're going
to let them win here.”
But over her vehement'objec-

tions. the board decided that the
resolution “effects a denial of
the ideal of public education within the broadest scope of academic
freedom.”
The board adopted as its policy
a personal letter Chairman
Charles P. McCormick had sent
the head of the legislature's Education Committee. In the leter,
McCormick said the university
would “be severely handicapped"
if the students “are not allowed
to discuss current issues with

knowledgeable people even
though such people may entertain
views with which we are not in
sympathy.”
In her letter to Governor Tawes,
Mrs. Whitehurst said she was resigning because "I cannot continue to serve with regents who
cannot see the havoc the Communists have created throughout
the world and what they propose
to do in the future.”
Later she told the Maryland
Diamondback, "1 agree with the
arguments that the young people
should know about the philosophy
of Communism but we have competent teachers on the campus
who can inform them, instead
of allowing the Communist propagandists to use our university
to sell their atheistic, dictatorial
way of life to our students.”
Lor Mrs Whitehurst, the future
of education in Maryland is not
bright. “They'll (the Communists)
come now that they know they
can," she said. “You wait and see.
They'll come, and why shouldn't
they?”

An IDYLLIC SUMMER
for GRADUATE and
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS

Study at Wagner College’s
scenic, woodland campus

The trio, including Beull Neidilnger, bass; Andrew White, saxophone; and John Bergamo, percussion, has performed avantfarde improvisations at jazz clubs
in Buffalo and in previous concerts at UB. The three instru-

on Staten Island

mentalists,

chosen on the basis
of their work in contemporary
music, have been members of
the Center for the Creating and
Performing Arts for the past
year.

The public is welcome.

Air Society,
Angel Flight
Attend Conclave
Astronauts and four-star generals were among the guests present at the I8th National Arnold
Air Society Conclave in Dallas,
Texas during the first week of
April. At the same time, Angel
Plight, the auxiliary of Arnold
Air Society, was in Dallas for its
Hth National Conclave.
Arnold Air Society members
Joseph Kinderman, Roger Vallie,
and David Agro represented UB
at the Conference, Delegates from
Angel Flight were Leslie Ecker,
Lorie Foroscij and Sharon Irons.

Astronauts White and McDivitt
received the John F. Kennedy
Award for outstanding contributions to space research and
development at the Arnold Air

Conclave.

CORRECTION
Steve Rogin is not Free
University of Buffalo
Committee Ch a i r m a n.
There are no officers.

Enjoy New York City’s cultural highlights
museums, concerts, theatres.
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Wagner’s beautiful 86 acre hilltop in Staten Island is
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Co-ed Liberal Arts summer sessions in 30 major areas of learning—two sessions
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Credits may be obtained also for 3 special programs: “Exploring Art in New York”,
July 11-22; “New York City Writers’ Conference”, July 11-27; and
“Drama in the Church”, June 13-July 1.
Undergraduates may take courses leading to degrees in Bachelor of Arts,
Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Science in Education. Graduate students may take
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Master of Science in Education, Master of Business Administration,
(including Hospital Administration), Master of Science in Bacteriology.

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□ Drama in the Church

Name

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I am presently attending

(Coliojo or Unlvoralty)

�•

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rfe

Tuesday. April It, IMA

SPECTRUM

s

■!

(.=*

—.»

Baseball Team Drubs ECTI
By RICH BAUMGARTEN

The UB baseball team began
its 1966 season by defeating ECTI
twice last week, 8-2 and 8-3.
A throng of about 200 turned
out at Clark Field last Thursday
to watch UB pound out an 8-2
win over the Kats in chilly 45
degree weather.

tion. The Bulls copped this game,
the six-hit pitching
of three UB moundsmen, a ninehit attack and a good defense.
8-3, behind

Brian Hansen led the way with
two hits including a long triple,
but it was Long’s base-loaded
three-bagger that capped UB's
five-run uprising in the third
inning.

After the game Coach Jim
Peelle said, ‘This was a fine team
performance. The boys were hit-

Ron McEwan, who pitched the
first five innings, got the win

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Netmen Take
Pair From Kats
The UB tennis team successfully opened its season Thursday by posting an 8-1 victory
over Erie County Technical Institute on the UB courts. Friday
the UB team followed with another 8-1 triumph, this time at
BCT1. Denny Brzezinski was 2-0
at first singles and 2-0 at first
doubles. Len Schneider, at second singles, was 1-1. Other strong
victories were posted by Matt

Yuschdk,

Pete

Lederman,

Don

Mingle and Jim Ripley. Other
players who contributed their talents were Paul Goldsmith, Mike

Greek Olympiad
This Sunday, April 24, Gamma
Phi Fraternity will sponsor its
Seventh Annual Greek Olympiad,
The Olympiad will be held at
Rotary Field and will begin at
1:00 p.m.

:i homers

ting aggressively. We should have
a real good season.”

for the Bulls, with good relief
work by Dick Pirozzolo and Rut-

kowski.

Every regular in the UB lineup had at least one hit as the
Bull batsmen cracked 14 hits off
three ECTI pitchers. Sophomore
Ken Rutkowski. playing his first
varsity game, had a big day with

the stick. Rutkowski got UB’s
first hit of the 1966 season with
two outs in the first inning; then
with the score tied 2-2 in the
fourth . Rutkowski slammed a
homer over the leftfield fence
and the Bulls never looked back.
Doug Long asio starred in the
hitting department with three
hits, while Jim Duprey and Fred
Geringer each had two safeties.

While the UB sluggers were
ripping the Tech pitchers. Don
Potwora,
the
Bulls’ starting
pitcher, settled down after a
shaky first inning and pitched
brilliant baseball. Po’wora kept
the ball low and kept ECTI hitting constantly on the ground.
Tim Uraskevich, hard-throwing
righthander, pitched
the last
three innings and looked good,
allowing only one hit and striking out five.
But if the UB offense was
great, the defense was superlative. The defense played error-

less ball and the infield looked
particularly sharp. Short stop Ron
Leiser made a great catch of a
first-inning line drive, while Fran
Buchta handled
some tough
chances at the hot corner.
UB's daring base-running and
aggessive hitting paid dividends

in several UB tallies. Leiser and

Long each stole key bases that
led to runs, while Duprey, Geringer and Long each contributed
run-producing,

two-out hits.

On Friday the Bulls again met
ECT1 at Clark Field. The game
was originally scheduled
for
EOT1, but the Kats’ field turned
out to be in unplayable condi

Dick Seils, Jim Klein and Bob
Ix)kczynski each had two hits for
ECTI. Harrison Hicks took the
loss for the Kats.

NOTES: Despite only two outdoor practices because of bad
weather, UB’s hitting and pitching appeared in midseason form
credit Peelle and Assistant Bill
Monkarsh with a job well done
. . . Duprey was nicked hard
on
the leg with a foul tip in the
first game, but the big catcher
shook it off . . . Monkarsh was a
three-sport, all-star catcher in his
high school days. He played baseball for UB in 1957 and 1958
before joining the Dodger chain
. . . ECTI took a lesson from UB’s
opening game and stole five bases
three by John Cervi
on Friday . . . Long got his third theft
of the year for UB in the fourth
inning of the game . . . Hansen
made a great running catch to
rob ECTI’s George Conway of an
extra-base hit in the second game
. .
The Bulls have yet to commit an error this season.

The Olympiad was initiated
when the fraternity was founded,
and has since become an annual
event in which all Greek organizations, both fraternities and sororities, participate. In conjunction with the event, an advertising booklet is issued by the
fraternity sponsored both by
other Greeks and by local
merchants.
There are two classes of events
in the Olympiad, those for men
and those for women. Men’s
events include: 100 and 220 yard
dashes, half mile run, running
broad jump, mile relay, shot put,
high jump, softball throw, egg
toss, and tug-o-war. Women’s
events are: 50 yard dash, 100
yard relay, standing broad jump,
softball throw, sock race, threelegged race, nail pounding, egg

toss, tug-o-war,
broad jump.

and

running

Last year’s victorious organizations were Alpha Sigma Phi and
Alpha Gamma Delta. The overall
trophy rotates each year to the
high point organization, with
three consecutive victories necessary for retirement of the trophy.
Alpha Sig has had possession of
the trophy for two years, so a
victory this year would enable
them to retire the award.

—

The diamondmen met RIT at
home Monday, and will play Buffalo State in a twinbill at State
Wednesday.
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Comet, Larry Glaser and Howie
Gould.
The UB Netmen will host
Gannon this afternoon and Buffalo State on Wednesday.

TRIVIA

All entries for today’s Sports
Trivia contest must be handed
to the sports desk of the Spectrum by this Friday. Prize-winners of and answers for today’s
quiz will appear in next Friday’s
edition.
Today’s quiz;

X. Who made the first error
in a regular season game in the
history of the Mets?
2. What baseball player was
called ‘The Plowboy”?
3. What was Sweetwater Clif-

ton’s real first name? ;
4. After whose hit did Enos
Slaughter score the winning run

of the 1946 World Series?
5. Aboard what horse did Eddie Arcaro win his last Kentucky

Derby?

6. Who won the 1947 U.S.
Open?
7. Who was the American
League ERA leader in 1960?
8. How many pitches did Don
Larsen throw in his perfect

game?

All participants in the Olympiad are bound by certain rules.
(Among these is that covering
footwear). Not allowed are any
kind of spikes or any members
the varsity track team.
Awards will be given in the
week following the Olympiad in
the Fillmore Room at the tables.
Peramnent trophies will be given
to the eyar’s high point organizations, both fraternities and sororities. The rotating trophy will
be given to the higher of the
two-victors.

9. Who was Red Grange’s collegiate coach?
10. Who won the AAU Women’s backstroke title in 1959?

Name
None of Tuesday’s entries
had any correct answers on them,
which saved the Spectrum the
cost of having to give away any
prizes.

The answers; 1. Larry Doby 2.
Bob Mitera (444 yds.) 3. Frank
Sullivan 4. Lionel Hebert 5. Wahoo Sam Crawford 6. Frankie
Brimsek 7. Vic Rouse 8. Herby
Flam 9. Amsterdam 10. Milton
Campbell.

—

—

PHYSICAL EDUCATION Track Team at Colgate
By LEN SCHNEIDER

The present emphasis upon
scholarship in our schools and
colleges throughout the nation
tends to overshadow the student’s judgment regarding the
need for physical fitness. All too
often he feels that he cannot
afford to devote the time necessary to attain and retain a state
of fitness through participation
in physical education, athletics,
and/or intramural sports.

serve and develop their own heritage of health so necessary for

their survival in this scientific
but sedentary age.
For such tasks as the college
and a competence which will see
student faces today, there is no
substitute for a personal fitness
him through.

The UB track team will jourHamilton, New York, Wednesday to open its 1966 track
season. Although very weak in
depth, the Fishermen bolstered
by Captain Larry Elsie, are hopeful of beginning the season on
the “right foot"
as one would
say in track
against the Red
Raiders.
ney to

American college students have
their work cut out for them. The
demands made upon
their
strength and intelligence are
heavy, real and constant. In the

unending struggle to preserve

our

culture against those forces which
would destroy it, college students
of today will become leaders
who must guide the way.

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The responsibility and the opportunity are personal. Not only
must college students become
technically, philosophically and
artistically prepared as productive citizens, but they must also
live in such a manner as to pre-

Auidant Coach Dando at Work

—

—

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>L.

f
_

HONORS

h~

-1

PROGRAM

I Bf

(See Page 2)

VOLUME 16

"

IEbDHukI

AT L,BE *TY

.....

”

AND "SMYTHE"
(See Page

NO. 39

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1966

Senate Affirms Academic Freedom;
Criticizes Council, Opposes Feinberg
The Student Senate passed a
resolution affirming “the right
of University Relations to report
on all university activities, regardless of their content or intent” at a meeting last Wednesday.

The Buffalo Common Council
had passed a resolution requesting an investigation of "the use
of state facilities and agencies to
conduct anti-Viet Nam activities.”
The resolution passed by the
Senate urges the Common Council to rescind its resolution.
Three new members were elected to the Executive Committee of
the Student Senate—Ellen Cardone, Daniel Rothoiz, and Susan
Landerson.

cords with discount printCurtiss Montgomary, Engineering Senetor, hnns MOO (plus) expense for ID
ing tho biggost boondoggle ovor possod by Wudont government. Ho also proposed the Senate investiinto
two
campuses.
Photo by Carol Good son
gate the administration proposal to split the university

CW Seeks Active Support for War
The Committee for Victor in
Vietnam will sponsor a mass rally
at Memorial Auditorium on April
23 at 8 p.m. designed to express
community support of United
States policy in Vietnam.
Speaking invitations have been
sent to: Vice President Hubert
H. Humphrey; United States Senators Jacob K. Javits, Everett M.
Dirksen and Roy Wilkins; the
President of the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People; and National
President of Young Americans for
Freedom Tom Houston.
The Committees lor Victory in
Vietnam was organized at UB last
February for the express purpose
of supporting the war in Vietnam
according to Committee Co-chairSickler. It presently has over 250
members.
Mr. Sickler, speaking at a CW
meeting last week said, “Every
indication, each poll, every survey shows solid support for U.S.
Vietnam policy. But what is the
American public doing to express
their appreciation and support to
our fighting men? Edmund Burke
once said ‘All that is needed for
civil men to succeed is for good
men to do nothing.’ It is time
the majority speaks
. this rally
is the chance we have been waiting for.”
Mr. Klinger stated, “Having ob.,

served the complete lack of de-

brutal totalitarianism,
and persecution of opposition
which has taken place in communist nations, we believe that the
forces of communism should be
vigorously opposed. We believe
that the Vietcong, supported by
the North Vietnamese are a part
of the communist alliance seeking to expand and overthrow noncommunist governments.
“We believe that on the basis
of the ruthless terror that has
been exhibited by the communists
against their own people in Vietnam that a Vietcong victory would
bring a totalitarian dictatorship
which would liquidate its enemies and deprive the Vietnamese
people of all fundamental freedoms.
mocracy,

its work both to the Vietnamese
and to the entire world to defend
the South Vietnamese people
against the communist threat. We
believe that it would be both
morally indefensible and politically disastrous for us to break our
promise and to withdraw from
Vietnam without having guaranteed its independence and freedom.

Following the conclusion of the
war we favor free elections for
the Vietnamese people. Following
victory we believe that the United
States should do its utmost to
improve the living standards of

Shortage of Resident Housing
To Raise Co—liter Enrolment
Housing Director Thomas Schillo disclosed that a housing shortage will force a reduction in the
number of incoming resident
Freshmen students from 1060 to
850 next semester.
To compensate for the reduction, an additional 200 Freshmen
commuters will be accepted to
stabilize the size of the Freshman class, according to Admissions and Records Director A. L.
Kaiser.
Academic standards for admission will not be lowered since
more Buffalo area students are
expected to apply than have in
the past, commented Dr. Kaiser.
Mr. Schillo noted that Buffalo

is not an apartment or rooming
house city. Consequently, upperclass women have difficulty obtaining approved housing, which
results in an added burden on
the dorms
“There are rooms in the city,
but not where a girl would want
to live. Apartments outside the
city are often beyond the budget
of the students. Furthermore,
landlords are hesitant to rent to
students.”
Mr. Schillo emphasized, “The
Dean of Women is looking at this
problem in a liberal way. She
would like as many Seniors and
Juniors as possible to live in approved off-campus housing.”

the Vietnamese people and combat their other enemies of poverty, hunger, disease, illiteracy and
social inezuity.
“We have seen America's peace
gestures contemptuously rebuffed
by the North Vietnamese and we
believe that until such time as
the communists are willing to
agree to a peace without American surrender, it is our duty to
give our firm support to our soldiers in Vietnam.”
In summation, Mr. Klinger added, “We support the present United States objective in Vietnam
which is to defeat the communist
threat to South Vietnam and to
guarantee independence and freedom to its people. This is our conception of victory.”

ree

A motion was carried to appropriate funds for having United States National Student Association discount cards printed
on the back of UB Identification
cards in September. The USNSA
cards will entitle students to dis-

counts in hotels, motels, restaurants and other public service
facilities across the United States.
Convocations Committee Chair-

man Sarah Lee Rubenstein sub-

mitted the annual report listing
three lecture series of Contemporary Philosophy, China, and
Theology, lectures on physics,
contemporary humor, dance and
the co-sponsored Discriminating
about Discrimination as last
year’s accomplishments.

International Student Affairs
Committee Chairman Richard
Jaross cited “orientation for
foreign students” as the committee’s main goal. He emphasized
the committee's “tremendous
success” in orienting 120 new
foreign students this year.
The Senate passed an $1160
budget for the Film Society, and
a $2261 budget for the Sociology
Club.

niversity

The Free University of Buffalo
(FUB) will hold a general organization meeting Monday, April
18 at 7:30 in 329 Norton.

Recognition was given to three
new organizations—International

Association of Students in Economic and Commercial Sciences,
Undergraduate Medical Society
and SUNY Senders. Recognition
of the History and Logic of Science Club was postponed until
a list of members could be obtained.
Proposed Changes to Hie
Constitution
(Student Judiciary)

Addition: The Judiciary may
remove for misconduct in office,
members of all courts under its
jurisdiction. Removal of such
members shall be after a formal
hearing before the Judiciary,
brought on written request by
one or more members of such
courts or a member of the Judiciary. Such requests shall contain specified charges of misconduct in office and shall be signed by the member or members
instituting the proceeding.
By Laws: Article 4
Addition: F. To levy other
other penalties not inconsistent
with article 4, section A through
E.
(Activities Recognition)
Article 1, section 2, C. The Student Senate shall have the power
to review all student organizations, unless such action be in
conflict with University policy
and regulation.
By Laws: Article 4, section 2,
subsection A, part 2 A. To inform the Student Senate of the
sponsorship of new activities,
the development of new functions for existing activities, or
abolition of any student activity.
B. To register any and all
student activities upon evidence
of a constitution and a faculty
advisor.
Section 3, subsection A. 1. Allocations. The Finance Committee
shall recommend to the Student
Senate the allocation of the Student Activities Fee to registered
student organizations and activities whose membership is open
to all students.
'

rganizing Monday

academic community with the incompetence and failure of the
existing institutions. Repeatedly,

intellectual and creative attempts
have been prostituted by cconomic and political interests.”

PUB Committee Chairman Steven Rogin disclosed that the Free
University has received temporary recognition from William Siemering, Associate Coordinator of
Student Activities and Sociology
Professor William J. Harrell has
been appointed faculty advisor.

Various methods of organization are now being investigated
and faculty members are being

approached as prospective participants in the Free University,
which will be initiated next year
according to Mr. Rogin.
“The flexibility of the curricula, which will include subjects
from all areas of the humanities
and social sciences, will be maintained by the selection of topics
for discussion in accordance with
demand.”

Mr. Rogin said, "the basic goal
of FUB is to provide a free intellectual environment in which
teacher and student may engage
in pertinent inquiry.”
He continued, “the formation
of a Free University is motivated
by the disgust and dissatisfaction of many individuals In the

International Club elect* new officers: Front, I for: Judi Mack. Mrresponding secretary; Janice Palmeri, vice president; Christa Pewtsch,
recording secretary. Rear: Joseph Hang, president; Perde Bartefc,
treasurer.
Newly elected officers of the
The club will hold an InterInternational Club are: President,
national Fiesta Saturday. April
Joseph Hang (Singapore): Vice- 23 at 7:30 p m. in the Conference

President, Janice Palmari (Buffalo); recording secretary, Christina Peutsch (Austria); corresponding secretary, Judi Mack
(Buffalo): and treasurer, Pedro
Bartok (Venezuela). They will
take office April 28, 1966.

Theater and the Fillmore Boom.
Fiesta events include a variety
show, exhibits, and delicacies
from foreign countries.
Donations for the evening are
$2 00 per person. The public is
invited to attend.

�PAGE TWO

Honors Program
By RONNIE BROMBERG

An honors program should endeavor to give the “best possible
and most individualized education
to the best students,” explained
Dr. Lynd Forguson, Chairman of
the Honors Committee of the
College of Arts and Sciences, in
an interview with this reporter
April 12.

In tracing the history of
SUNYAB's honors program, Dr.
Forguson noted that the University of Buffalo had previously
had a tutorial system. All students studied independently or
in small groups with professors,
their grades being determined by

a comprehensive exam. When the
University became state, the increased number of students predicated a new system.

In the fall of 1962, the honors
program was initiated. It has
“limped along,’ Dr. Forguson said,
with the questions of what it is
going to be and should be still
largely unsettled. At present,
there are two honors programs—the programs of the individual
departments and that of the College of Arts and Sciences.
Any department may elect to
give honors to its majors on the
basis of grade point average and
academic promise. The format of

Buddhist Scholar Visits Campus;
Dr. Hanayama Here Until May 5
Dr. Shoyu Hanayama, teacher
and Buddhist minister, has been
appointed visiting professor
through May 5 in conjunction
with the University’s Visiting Asian Professors Program.

Dr.

Friday, April 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

Hanayama, who is

Japa-

nese, was educated at the University of Tokyo where he earned
his bachelor’s degree in Indian
philosophy in 1955, his master's
and doctor’s degrees in the science of humanity in 1957 and
1962. He also holds a Certificate
from Union Theological Seminary
in New York City.

Minister of the Buddhist
Church in Seabrook, New Jersey,
Dr. Hanayama came to the University from a visiting professorship
at Monmouth College, Monmouth.

Illinois, which he held earlier this
year. He served as research associate in the Department of Indian Studies at the University
of Wisconsin at Madison in 1963
and 1964, and as visiting professor at various units of the State
University of New York during
the summer sessions of 1963 and
1964.
His two most recent publications are “The Meaning and
Purpose of Life According to
Buddhism,’ and “A Summary of
Various Research on the Prajnaparamita Literature by Japanese
Scholars.”
The director of the Visiting
Asian Professors Program is Dr.
Burvil H, Glenn, professor of
education at the University.

'Best Possible Education'

the programs are established by
the departments themselves, as
are the criteria for the honors
work. Students are awarded distinction, high distinction or highest distinction upon successful
completion of the honors work in
their major.

they might be qualified for honors work should make themselves
known to their department or

The College honors program
basically consists of the programs
of the separate departments in
the College. It is administered by

Dr. Forguson noted that honors
work should provide “head-on intellectual contact with faculty
members.” Honors students can
usually work more directly with
faculty members than in the regular classes. More intensive study

the Honors Committee, which determines the criteria for continuing in and graduating from the
honors program, having the power
to waive any and all degree requirements for honors students.
Members of this committee are
Drs. Robert Wessner, chairman
of American Studies program;
Claude Welch, Political Science
department; Joseph Freyden, English; Charles Beyer, Modern Languages; Carmela Privatera, Biology; and David Louis, History.

Last year approximately 85
students participated in the program. Dr. Forguson said that he
would like to see a truly college
honors program developed, in
addition to the departmental honors programs.

Dr. Forguson emphasized that
only when enrolled in the College
honors program for at least one
year may a student graduate
magna or summa cum laude. The
committee decides his qualifications, using a weighted average.
Students are chosen for the
honors programs on a basis of the
4 semester average from University College; approximately a 2.0
or over is needed. Dr. Forguson
suggests that students who think

the Honors Committee, since
other than grades and specific
recommendations from the department, there is no way of finding out who is qualified.

(CPS)—The W. E. B. DuBois
Clubs of America have gained
about 600 new members since
the Justice Department’s request
that it register as a Communist
front group, according to Hugh
Fowler, national chairman.

Fowler told an Indiana University audience the move was
“probably the biggest boost to
membership that could have taken place.”
DuBois Club membership numbers about 3,000 in 58 chapters,
mostly on college campuses in
New York, California, Wisconsin
and Illinois, he said.
College administrations are not
sure what the status of the clubs
on their campuses will be. The
chapters, which maintain their
local autonomy, have stated they
will not register.
At Wayne State University,
Frank Tuohey, Director of Uni-

a quick
downsloping roof line

spinner-style

wheel covers

the honors programs would be
excellent training for graduate
school, often enabling the student to do independent research.
Nearly all departments in Arts
and Sciences have honors programs. They are; Biology, Chemistry, Classics, Drama and Speech,
Economics, English, Geography,
Geological Science, History, Modern Languages, Music, Philosophy,
Physics, Political Science, Psychology and Sociology.

W. E. B. DuBois Club's Membership
Boosted By Justice Department Ruling

What you notice is...

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triple taillights

of the subject, area is usually
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versity Relations, said the only
restriction on university recognition was that the group be nondiscriminatory. “Since this is the
only limitation other than illegal
purposes or activities, the university has no basis for action
at this time."
The office of the dean of students at Brooklyn College said
the group’s activities would not
be hindered. A rally followed
the announcement, with the club
trying to enroll new members.
The clubs, as a whole, maintain that the Justice Department’s
ruling stems from their widespread activity protesting the
war in Viet Nam. Rick Eisenberg,
a DuBois Club worker in Brooklyn, said registration was sought
when the organization became
“one of the most effective groups
in the peace movement.”
Carole Cohen, Brooklyn College DuBois Club president, said,
“It is not coincidental that the
government has chosen to attack
us at the same time it is carrying out a new escalation of the
war and attempting to implement a-student draft.”
Staughton Lynd, assistant professor of history at Yale, joining
the club as an expression of
“similar sentiments,” called the
action “a direct
slap at the peace movement.”
The Justice Department definition states the group “knowingly conspires to perform acts that
would substantially contribute to
the establishment within the
U.S.A. of a totalitarian dictatorship under foreign control.”
The stated goals of the club
are “Marxism, peace, civil rights
and civil liberties.” They deny
any Communist Party affiliation
and reassert a completely socialistic ideology independent of any
backing.

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Martha Rotenberg, seeking to
inform a Chapter on the Temple
University campus, said, “There
may be some Communists in some
of our chapters. This is because
anyone who agrees with our
policy may join. We do not request a statement of political
affiliations to join the group.”
Ilene Richards, of the UCLA
DuBois Club, in explaining the
club’s refusal to register, stated,
“Upon registration, certain things
happens. Employment anywhere

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would be extremely difficult. The
financial cost of staying in operation would become prohibitive.
Those groups that did manage
to survive must label all their
mail as being ‘disseminated by
a Communist organization.” -I
Of the 22 organizations required to register under the pro-!
visions of the 1952 Infernal Se-;
curity Act none have ever doneso. However, 19 of the organizations collapsed after charges
were filed and three were acquitted for insufficient evidence.
The DuBois Dubs are afraid their
organization will lose members
if the registration requirement
is pushed. The communist -front
section of the Act requires .only
that the group register and not
the individual member.
Members have also charged
the Justice Department's decision
constitutes an open invitation-to
s r'
violence and extremism
. jUffi
“

‘AHWlVl'.VAV

1

•

�Friday, April 15, 1966

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

C C Furnas Recognition Day
To Be Observed Across the Country
“Clifford C. Furnas Recognition
Day" will be observed April 19
at 30 Alumni Club testimonial
dinners held throughout the

country.
The C. C. Furnas scholarship
gift for graduate studies will be
presented at the Buffalo dinner
to Dr. and Mrs. Furnas from individuals across the country.
The Buffalo dinner, at the
Statler-Hilton, will begin at 6:30
p.m. with a reception in the

Terrace Room, followed by a dinner in the Golden Ballroom at
7:30 p.m.
Tickets for the evening are $25
per person. The price includes a
contribution to the gift for the
Furnases.
The program will be broadcasted from Buffalo via gradio-grade
telephone circuit at 9 p.m. to each
of the individual area dinners.
Later in the spring a portrait
of Dr. and Mrs. Furnas will be
presented to them.

Dr. R. Loewy to Speak
At AIAA Awards Dinner
U.S. Air Force Chief Scientist

Dr. Robert G. Loewy will be the
principal speaker at the awards
night dinner of the Northeastern
Regional Student Conference of

the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)
April 16 at Cornell Aeronautical
Laboratory at 6:30 p.m.
The dinner will conclude a twoday conference at UB attended by
graduate and undergraduate students from fifteen colleges and
universities in the northeast.
I ns t i t u t e representative AI
Spindler announced, ‘The highlight of the conference will be
the presentation of original technical papers on aero-space research undertaken by the students.” Cash awards totaling more
than $600 will be given to stu-

dents presenting outstanding research.
Dr. Loewy was associate professor of mechanical and aerospace sciences at the University
of Rochester before his appointment last September as Air Force
chief scientist. Earlier, he served
as technical assistant and associate research engineer at Cornell
Aeronautical Laboratory. While
working in Western New York,
Dr. Loewy was a member of
AIAA’s Niagara Frontier Section.
Dr. David Benenson, UB associate professor of engineering, is
general chairman of the conference.

By SHARON SHULMAN
Last year, freshmen with poor
academic averages were allowed,
under University College’s “Furlough System,” to return to college after a year at work. This
plan is presently being evaluated,
but will be continued for the present freshman class in absence of
definite results.
The program was inaugurated
by Dr. Milton Plesur, Furlough
System director and acting Dean
of University College. Since the
program’s initiation, Dr. Plesur
has received numerous letters
from students on furlough who indicate a desire to return to school.
The following excerpts from such
letters express this attitude as
well as the problems that caused
each student to leave the University temporarily:

“While working on a job that
required neither education nor
thought, I suddenly felt more
like a robot than an individual.
It seemed as though my brain
might easily become a vestigial
organ. Because I found no challenge in high school, I never
really had to study. Therefore I
never really studied at college,
either. Another cause of my failure was a poor sleeping schedule
I’d stay up at night and sleep
through classes."
—

The two-day meeting will also
include tours of Textron’s Bell
Aerosystems Company and Cornell Astronautical Laboratory.

ACLU, NYCLU Annual Meeting;

Civil Liberties And War Panel
The AOLU and the NYCLU
will hold their annual meeting
this Sunday at 8 p.m. in the John
P. Kennedy Recreation Center
Auditorium. The program will include election of officers, an address by Marvin M. Karpatkin,
Esq., and a panel discussion on
“Civil Liberties and War Issues.”
Nominations for 3-year terms
on the Executive Board are: Dr.
W. Leslie Barnette, Jr., Dr. Lyle
B. Borst, Mr. Allen Giles, Dr.
John Hoffman, and the Rev. Richard Prosser.
James B. Alteson Esq., has been
nominated to fill the unexpired
portion (one year) of Rabbi Nathan Gaynor’s term.
The following officers have
been nominated from the membership of the Board: Richard
Lipsitz, Chairman, Rev. Howard
Waterhouse, Vice-Chairman, Dr.
W. Leslie Barnette, Jr., Secretary,
and Allen Giles, Treasurer.
The nominating committee has
submitted the following candi-

Plesur's Furlough System
Beginning Second Year

dates: Arthur D Butler, ChairGarver, Robert
North Jr., Mrs. Sonia Robinson,
J. Stephen Sherwin and Emanuel
Tabachnick.
Additional nominations may be
made from the floor.
man, Newton

The panelists will be Col. Silas
R. Molyneaux (U.S.A.F. Ret.), Professor Newton Garver, and Dr.
Marvin Zimmerman.

Another student found that because he was a commuter, he was
spending more time with old
friends and less on schoolwork:
“I began to live for that precious
free time when I could be with
my friends. As far as schoolwork
was concerned, there was no
studying, no motivation."
One student wrote that he had
had his fun at UB, “but with
nothing to show for it except the
dismissal slip.”

A girl who is presently wrapping meat in a supermarket described her problem as one of
maturity. “It was too emotionally
immature to be self-controlled or

self-reliant. Now I find that I
want more than work for which
no education is needed. I never
really appreciated being around

knowledge until I began to work
in a place where knowledge is

void.”
This same student continued:
“I gained confidence in myself
during the year on furlough. Now
I have the desire to learn in addition to going to school. I was
previously under the impression
that the desire to return to school
would decrease during the furlough year. 1 discovered, instead,
that if the desire to learn is there,
it will increase in gigantic proportion.”

In response to such letters, Dr.

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soon as possible."

Dr. Plesur said that the system
will be continued despite the fact
that male students may be drafted. If this were the case, students
could return to the University following their military discharges.

“The Skanks” and Sigma Alpha
Mu will participate in a “Championship Trivia" contest Monday,
April 18 on WKBW-TV, channel
7 at 9:30 p.m.
The winning team will receive
a loving cup and a $100 check
from WKBW-TV which will be

presented to the C. C. Furnas
Scholarship Fund.

Irv Weinstein will be the
moderator. Mr. Richard Berkson,
account executive at WKBW and
Mr. Pierre La Marrc, treasurer
of the Studio Arena Theater
judge the contest.
“The Skanks" are Leon Ix-wis,
David Bergen, Francine Fischbein and Sebastian Dangcrfield.
Sigma Alpha Mu will be represented by Robert
Steven
H. Sunshine, Barry A. Gutterman and Daniel L. Alterman.
Production personnel for the
program include Mr. 0. Lyle
Koch, executive producer, Mr.
Don
Kline, producer-director,

Mr. Daniel A. Rose, coordinator
and Miss Joan Alpern, research
assistant.

Labor Negotiation
Is Lecture Topic
Dr. Richard E. Walton, Profes-

sor of Administrative Sciences at
Purdue University, will deliver
an address on “The ‘Behavioral
Approach' to Research in Labor
Negotiations” to faculty and graduate students April 18 at 2 p.m.
in 234 Norton.

Professor Walton is the author
of The Imped of the Professional
Engineering Union; A Behavioral
Theory of Labor Negotiations,
and articles in professional journals. He is a labor relations consultant to a number of firms,
including the IBM Corporation,
Esso Research, and Eli Lilly
&amp;

Co.

Today is the last day
for making up grades of
incomplete.

Dr. J. Hall to Discuss
Psychiatry And Crime
Visiting Professor Jerome Hall
will deliver a paper at the symposium on “Psychiatry and the
Criminal Law” April 18 at 8:30
p.m. in Butler Auditorium.

Dr. Hall, professor of law at
Indiana University, is visiting UB
under the sponsorship of the Law
School and College of Arts and
Sciences.

classical
Kept

County Library, Lafayette Square.

Both lectures are open to the

public.

WMh

“

Shanks,
Clash
Trivially at 1/VKBIlV

Dr. Hall will speak April 22,
12 p.m., at the Buffalo and Erie

WRANGLER

Plesur has said that although
students on furlough fear stagnation of the mind, they have in
this system a chance to prove to
the university that they have sufficient motivation to continue
with intellectual pursuits. If academic interest can be lost in a
year, it should be found out as

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�Editorial Comment

.

.

The

.

THE DAILY SPECTRUM?
During the past week, circumstances and editors
conspired to turn the Spectrum into a daily paper. The

editors and staff deserve tremendous credit for carrying
this experiment through to a successful conclusion! Many
old problems were accentuated, and a few new ones
created, but the experience of the past week proved
once again that all of these could be reduced to the fact
that there are not enough competent, dedicated people
participating in the work of this paper.
The effect of a week of daily papers on the campus
community is hard to assess, but the effect on the editors
and staff can be computed in terms of lost sleep, skipped
meals, frayed nerves, and a sense of achievement. A
campus this size, with the pretentions to excellence and
prestige which this campus appears to have, ought to
be able and willing to support a daily paper. We ought
to have a large enough staff that people on the paper
wouldn’t have to cut classes, skip meals, and go without
sleep and relaxation, but for those who do, the rewards
are great.
Some day, the staff of the Spectrum will make a
present to this University of a daily paper, but that day
will come only when more students realize the sense of
achievement and excitement that comes with hard work
on a campus paper.

FREE SPEECH IN BUFFALO
The Buffalo Common Council appears to be determined to express its support of our criminal war in Viet
Nam, even to the point of denying the right of free
speech to opponents of the war. The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom has twice been
refused permission to set up a table on Main Street for
the purpose of obtaining signatures on “peace-pledge
cards.”
The second refusal came Wednesday when a subcommittee of the Council found a technicality with which
to disqualify the WILPF request. The sub-committee’s
action was so arbitrary that it prompted a Republican
member of the Council, who supports the war, to say that
it was “a shame" that the committee could not “back up
the right to express a basic freedom.” Councilman Regan
went on to express his regret that the representatives of
WILPF' were “subjected to a dusting off an old rule, or
to a mild form of abuse.”
This arbitrary and oppressive action offers even
more evidence that the danger to our constitutional way
of life created by the war and the accompanying hysteria
growing.
If the “American way of life” is worth
fighting for. then it should be worth preserving as well.
The Buffalo Common Council is doing neither, but rather
subverting the very things which supposedly got us into
this vile war in the first place.
Hopefully, the women who arc working so hard to
express their feelings about the war will be able to obtain
permission from the city fathers to exercise their constitutional rights of free speech and petition. Hopefully
the harrassment and indignity to which they have been
subjected will cease, but if it does not, it will, ironically
enough, subvert the war. Tor the Common Council will
have proven that there is really nothing left to fight for.

THE

SPECTRUM

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

Editorin-Chief
Business

JEREMY TAYLOR

Manager

RAYMOND

D VOLPE

ALICE EOELMAN
Angelina, Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman. Karen Green.
Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman,
Teitler. Nancy Toder. Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg
Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Staff—Bonnie Bartow. Ron Ellsworth. Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons. Barbara Loeb.
Audrey Logel. Bob Martin. Suzanne Rovner. Martha Tack. William Weinstein.
Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Staff—Mike Castro. Mike Dolan. Steve Farbman. Bob Frey. Scott Forman,

News Editor

Staff—Loretta

Peter
Eileen

J. B

Shared

Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Stephanie Parker. Steve Silverman

Staff-—Joanne Bouchier.

Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Staff —Carol Becker. Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern. Sandy Lippman. Betsy
Claire Shottenfeld. Susan Zuckerberg
Staff—Terry
Mancmi

Friday, April 15, 19M

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Advertising Manager
Angelo. Audrey Cash. Pat

RON

Ozer.

HOLTZ

Rosenfeld.

Steve

Silverman.

Joseph

EDWARD JOSCELYN
Editor
Bonneau. Joseph Feyes. Carol Goodson.

Photography

Staff—Don Blank. Peter
Marc Levina. Ivan Makuch,

Robert Wynne

Circulation

Michael Soluri. Anthony
Manager

Faculty Advisor

Financial Advisor
EDITORIAL

Walluk.

DIANE

LEWIS

IRENE

WILLET

Alan Gruber.
Susan Wortman.

DALLAS GARBER

POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

ik

Second Class Postage

Subscription

$3.00

Paid at
per

Buffalo.

year,

N Y.
circulation

15.000
Represented
for
advertising by
national
National Advertising Service. Inc.. 420 Madison Ave., New York. N. Y.

grump

You very well might be better
off to skip this if you are in a
hurry. For various of reasons it
is one of those weeks when you
scrounge up the Spectrum for
both Friday, last, and Tuesday,
and the News and the Courier
and then you search desperately
for something upon which to expound.

There did not seem to be anything in any of the above sterling publications to elicit brilliance, however, it is to be noted
that I am not attempting to cast
any aspirations, I am merely admiting the fact that I am blah
today.
For one nasty thing my wife
and I were the third car to arrive

at the scene of a rather nasty
accident last Sunday night. A
young couple ran out of gas and
were walking back up the road
to get some in a gallon can. He
apparently was walking on the
side towards the road. A car
passed another and in doing so
hit him but not her.
We pulled up and did what
little we could. My wife is an RN
but there was nothing she could
or should have done. It was a
long wait for the ambulance. He
died in a hospital some four
hours after they put him in the
ambulance, apparently without
ever regaining consciousness.
I am without question one of
those people who prefers that
there be some sort of value in
things that occur. 1 have a very
open sort of value system that
finds values in all sorts of places
that befuddle some of my acquaintances. 'But when there is

nothing of sense or value as in
this case, it invariably stays with
me for a time. It does not particularly affect my behavior patterns
but if I attempt to write anything
humorous it would be as pathetic
as some people claim all my material is.
There are things about the situation I could mutter through my
beard, such as a very real question about the competence of the
ambulance attendants involved,
but I am unable to get horribly
worked up over that either. The
simple fact remains that it is
doubtful that anything except the
original senseless occurance is at
fault here.
Perhaps it is the stark comparison of the way the day was spent:
Church, the drive down to the
in-laws, the dinner, the nibbling,
a generally warm and friendly
atmosphere, and then a young
and upset man flagging you down
with a flashlight to show you a
blanket covered form by the side
of the road with a woman, the
wife, standing next to him crying
in a mechanical, uncomprehending way.

It is difficult to forget such a
scene, and it perhaps serves to
reinforce something that I think
we all forget, unless we are unfortunate enough to be a relative: Those 20 or thirty fatalities
a week we have in Vietnam are
all people, goddam it. I may
agree with them, I may disagree
with them, but they die, and when
they die, they bleed. I wonder
how many of those who are so
insistent that we are protecting

The Murder
By JOHN MEDWID

To the firemen of Portsmouth,
England whose inspection parade
was interrupted when a third
of the force was called to answer
a fire alarm goes our Bad Luck
of the Week Award.
To the Ludens Company which
now makes a Chocolate Cocoanut Cream confection in the
shape of an Easter Cross goes
our Sacrilege for Fun and Profit

Award.
To

the

nouncing

firm which recently

a new publication
for insurance agents and brokers
.
.
.
The Monthly John Liner
Letter" goes our unintentional
Pun of the Week Award.
...

To the 2l r of the people in
a poll recently taken by seven
Stanford University social scientists who support a plan to cut
federal aid to education if it
is necessary to pay for the war
in Viet Nam goes our Guns Will
,&lt;

...

Us Strong; Brains Will
Only Make Us Smart Award.
To the Saigon police who are
now “getting tough” with demonstrators, many of them students. using clubs and gas to
break them up goes our What
Do They Think This Is
Mississippi? Award.
To Mississippi State Police
who used tear gas and clubs
against Alcorn A &amp; M demonstrators who are protesting the
firing of teachers and dismissal
—

tion in civil rights activities goes
our What Do They Think This
Is—Saigon? Award.
To Barry Goldwater who blasted the Senate Foreign Affairs
Committee hearings on the war
in Viet Nam as “naked, unabashed. propaganda shows” goes our
Confuse

freedom in Vietnam, and a number of other places, have ever
seen blood spilled in anger?
And before you attempt to invalidate the question on the basis
of prejudice,. I grant that the
other side is just as human, and
probably bleeds and hurts just
as much while dying. It is easier
for me to remember some of the
people I trained with as an infantryman in Louisiana and try
to imagine them lying on the side
of a road covered with blood.
And if what I am saying sounds
mauldlin and sloppy, I wouldn't
worry about it, it probably is.
But it occurs to me that it is
highly improbable that many of
the people who have been flying
back and forth to Saigon with
such amazing consistancy have
ever seen anyone shot down and
lying there dying. And do not
talk to me of visits to hospitals.
I will maintain with great vigor,
if little proof, that the psychology
of seeing someone crumpled and
dying, and all wrapped up in
pretty white bandages is completely different.

I suspect I am an ultimate
pacifist. Self-defense only, and I
have this nagging feeling that we
may not be completely and honorably involved in self-defense in
Vietnam.
Hopefully, at least part of my
sense of humor will have returned by next week. If you read this
for its amusement value, I apologize.

of Gonzago

Make

Don't

by STEESE

Me With

The

Facts, I've Already Made Up My

Mind Award.

To Senator Everett Dirksen
who recently said. “Every buck

we can save will mean a buck
less in taxes and, believe me,
we’re going to hunt for those
savings’’ yet gave bipartisan support to an appropriation for
$14.5 billion to pay for Johnson’s
war goes our Hunt a Little Harder Award.
To the Democratic Represent-

ative from Missouri Richard Ichard who threatened press censorship to those Viet Nam newsmen who didn’t follow the official Washington line, “If the
news media do not demonstrate
the responsibility and the voluntary self-restraint of which I
know they are capable, then we
must be prepared to consider
some form of wartime news censorship which would include a
more stringent policy toward accreditation of correspondents, a
limitation in access to battle
zones and a scrutiny of the copy
filed” goes our John Peter Zenger All The News That Fits We
(Cont’d on P. 7)

Cacotopia and

By STEPHEN KRAFTS
An investigation of anti-war
activities at SUNYAB by the Buffalo Common Council, the single
best argument extant against
modern
American democracy,
might be encouraged if for no
other reason than demonstrating
the ignorance of our local politicians. Councilman Gus Franczyk's comments as reported in
the April 8 issue of the Spectrum
promise several delightful weeks
of political hackery, a real political science course for which academic credit should be granted.
Disregard the syntax of this
sentence of Franczyk s and concentrate on its meaning:
The main concern is the
use of state agencies, in the
light of the fact that our governor has agreed with President Johnson's stand (presumably on the War) and thus,
anti-war activities are a subpolicy...
version o(
,

Obviously any

self-respecting

anti-war group would be subversive in the sense that it op-

poses a state policy (i.e.,

war),

Franczyk's logic implies, however. that any activity in opposition to the governor's policies
would be "subversion of state
policy." Thus, one who opposes
the New York State sales tax
makes himself amenable to investigation for subversion. There
seems to be a constitutional issue involved here somewhere.
Although Franczyk
protests
that the Common Council is not
attempting to restrict freedom
of speech, the paranoic overtones
of the resolution would undoubtedly rule the day in the event
of an investigation. The question
of State University policy concerning the use of public relations facilities by student groups
is a jqere. incident tp get at the

anti-war

groups.

The

anti-war

groups would welcome an investigation if some meaningful issues

concerning the War in Viet Nam
could be raised, but the Council is not likely to allow a divergence

which would expose
the paucity of its knowledge. The
investigation would have to clandestine a la HCUA; its assaults
would be based on what for
the Council is the peripheral issue of state policy. There would
be little chance for the assaultees to rebut.
So perhaps it would be best
to have the Common Council
mind its own graft. One would
think that these political troglodytes could keep busy maintaining the status quo in education,
housing, urban redevelopment,
poverty, etc. without venturing
injo other areas of incompetence.

�Friday, April IS, 1966

SPECTRUM

oCetterd

PAGE FIVE

the Editor

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War Held Unpopular at Home and Abroad
Can the supporters of genocide
disassociate
themselves
from
every “form of extremism which
resorts to violence or attacks
people on the basis of their

race or religion?”

■As absurd as any affirmative
answer to this question might
seem, Steven Sickler, Marvin ZimKlinger and
merman, Frank
Donald Rich actually make a diligent attempt to cover up the
fact that militant support for
the U.S. war against Vietnam
has dwindled to exclude all but
the farthest reaches of the depraved ultra-right.

While thousands march against

the war across the country, such
groups as the American Nazi
Party and the KuKlux Klan assemble their twisted dozens to
prepare tactical assaults on these
broad demonstrations.
Popular anti-U.S. action is also
mounting in every major Vietnamese city, while Cao Ky, hated
dictatorial puppet, proclaims Hitler to be his only hero. That is

the kind of support the Johnson
policy finds in Vietnam.
The Johnson Administration has

carefully cultivated its isolation
by organizing such horendous
atrocities that even elements of
the Green Berets, most brainwashed and highly disciplined

m.

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section of the Army, has been
alienated. For example. Sgts.
Smith and McClure, whom the
Army has arbitrarily deprived of
all contact with the outside
world ever since they denounced
the war.

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Another Green Beret. Donald

Duncan, just back from Vietnam,

praised the anti-war demonstrators as being "opposed to people,
our own and others, dying for
a lie, thereby corrupting the very
word democracy." Zimmerman
and Company’s redbaiting tactics
will never be successful at this

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hideous level.

Joel Meyers
Youth Against War &amp; Fascism

Calien Hit For “Linguistic Trickery”
TO THE EDITOR;
James Callan uses in his article
The Right the reactionary neoKantian ethics of “universal application,” i.e., that to be moral,
an act must be such that the
ethical principle involved is applicable to all men and at all
times as a universal maxim.
This school of ethics has long
been discredited and now only
serves reactionary philosophy in
its attempts to confuse the masses
with linguistic trickery.
In a previous article, Callan
has ridiculed the struggle for
a minimum wage. Here we can
see quite clearly how the rightwing morality is the morality
of the rich and how it is immorality as far as the working
people are concerned. The rightwing is actually guilty of murder when it fights the minimum
wage and deprives the oppressed
of food, shelter, and medical attention. It is really hypocracy
when the right-wing supports
genocide and mass murder in
Vietnam while bemourning the
“loss of individual rights.”
All ethics are relative and are
strictly motivated by the interests
of certain groups. It is the rightwingers like Callan that put up
a blanket of hypocrisy talking

about the justification of “killing an innocent fetus” in order
to cover the fact that they support the slaughter of Asians so
that the big firms can get rich
while G.I.’s die! While Boeing,
Douglas and
United Aircraft
make huge profit on this barbaric war, the right-wing conceals their partisanship to these
giant corporations.

The left however states open-

ly that they are partisan to the
they feel the mass
murder inflicted by the big pro-

poor. That

ducers upon the poor
whether
the producers be cigarette companies or napalm manufacturers
matters little
is far more despicable and condemnable than
the act of abortion committed by
a mother who cannot feed
another child.
Jerry Gross
—

—

Extremism Is Relative
TO THE EDITOR:

a term such as this is always
relative to the individual's view-

The letter labeled “Anti-Communists Concerned With Extremism” in last Friday’s issue left
me with a feeling of uneasiness
which I have encountered many
times in the last few months.
The letter repudiates left and
right wing “extremism "and urges
the SDS and the Spectrum to
follow suit, after citing several
Communist prganizations who
marched with the SDS in protest to the war in Viet Nam.

point.
Labeling an organization or a
specific person is an easy way
to provoke emotional reaction.
It brings to the fore preconceived notions and prejudices
which hamper the rational thinking process. It enables decisions
to be based on distorted images
rather than the issues at hand.

It is our duty as responsible
citizens to decide for ourselves
when other citizens are acting
for
in an “extreme” fashion

INTER-FAITH DINNER

Let us stop name-calling and
start studying any available facts
and opinions we can muster, no
matter what the source, so we
can accept or reject them on
rational grounds.

Sunday, April 17, 4:30 p.m.
sponsored by the

Kenneth Jaffe

—

Council of Religious Organizations
University Presbyterian Church
[corner

oa
The Modern Dance Workshop
meets in the Clark Gym on Monday and Thursday nights. Monday’s session concentrates on improvisation and composition and
Thursday’s on technique.

The Committee for Victory in
Vietnam will hold a meeting this
afternoon at 3 p.m. in Norton

333.
In observance of National Library Week the University Library Association will present
two films in the Conference Theatre on April 18 and 19 at noon.
The films are part of a humanities series dealing with the cathedral at Chartres and the civilization of ancient Grrece,
Goodyear Hall will hold an
Open House Sunday between 2
and 5 p.m. Male attire should
include ties and no dungarees.
Women should wear skirts.
There will be a meeting of the

Photography Club this afternoon
at 4 p.m. in Norton 332. Tom
Crawley will speak.
UB Amateur Astronomers will

hold election of officers Mon-

day, April 18 in Hockstetter 111
at 4 p.m.

The Graduate Student Association is holding a picnic at Akron
Falls Park on Sunday, April 24
at 1 p.m. The picnic will feature
a chicken barbecue dinner (costing 25c), games for adults and
children, sporting events, and
sing along entertainment. Tickets

&amp;

Niagara Fell,

Blvd.J

ronic\

may be purchased at the Gradu-

ate Student Association Office,

Norton 311 or from department
representatives to the GSA Coun-

cil. Tickets must be purchased
in advance.
Graduate students are invited
to submit prose or poetry to
the GSA office for the Graduate
Student Publication,
Graduate Students wishing to

participate in the graduate tutorial service may contact departments or obtain a form from
the GSA office between 9 am.
and 1 p.m.
UB Opera Club will hold an
organizational meeting on Tuesday, April 19 at 4 p.m. in Baird

213. For information call Henry
Wicke at 83M341 or Susan
Pritchard 831-2454.

Weekly Calendar
April

IS

•

19

FRIDAY
Mixer; Druids and Jazz group cosponsored by Millard Fillmore
and Canisius Colleges, beer.
Canisius College Student Cen-

ter, 9 p.m

Ballet: Andre Eglefsky Ballet Co.,

Dufallo conducting, Kleinhans
Music Hall
Movie: “Gates of Hell,” Conference Theatre through Sunday
Play; “At Liberty” and “Smythe,”

Fillmore Room, 8:30 through
Saturday
Lecture: “Negro Leadership; Martin Luther King and Frederick

Douglas,” Professor Herbert G.
Storing Faculty Club, 8:00 p.m.
SATURDAY;

Dance Recital; Mary Anthony
Dance Theatre, Baird Hall, 8:30
p.m.

Concert: UB Blues, Clark Gym,

8:30

Main 5*.

SUNDAY
Concert: UB Band. Millard Fillmore Room. 8:30 p m
Folk Dancing: Norton 344. 7 to
11 p.m.

Exhibit:

Creative

Craft

Staff

Show. 231

Norton, all day
Panel Discussion: “Civil Liberties and War Issues”, principal
speaker. Marvin Karpatkin, J.
F. Kennedy Center. 114 Hickory
Street, corner Clinton. 8 p.m

Open House; Goodyear Hall. 2 to
5 p.m.
MONDAY;

Lecture: “Creative Thinking,”
William Stockfield. St. Monks
Church, 401 Woodward Ave.,
8:30 p.m.
Varsity Baseball; UB vs. RTF. 3

)

The Graduate Student Association of S.U.N.Y

i

Invito All Graduate Students to
yroc
;e Stud&lt;
The A nnuaif Graduate
/udent

)

picnic
Spouses, Kids, Stags and Dates of
GSA invited Rain or Snow or Shine

SUNDAY
APRIL
I RM.
Tickets Available
in 311 Norton Hall
9-1 Dally

24

I

*u*

|&amp;li®

p.m.

Lecture: “Psychiatry and Criminal
Law.” Butler Aud. Lobby. Ca
pen Hall, 8:30 p.m.

Tickets Also Available at Norton Union Ticket Office

I

�Friday, April 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

nms wss %mm College Overature Contest Now Open
The Philharmonic Junior Committee is sponsoring an “Overature” Cover Contest open to all
College students.
Entries will be submitted to a
panel Of judges who will select
the best 10 or 12 designs to
be presented to the Buffalo Philharmonic Society for final selection. Whether or not a design
will be used will be left to the
discretion of the Orchestra So-

I know that it is dangerous to deal in unqualified
superlatives, but The Oscar (Cinema I) may be the
worst movie that I have ever seen. And although that
may appear to close the issue completely, there are a
few other things to say. The movie has an almost inverse appeal about it due primarily to its often hilarious
attempts to capture a serious tone. The unintentional
self-satire' of the script (written by a quasMiip hack
named Harlan Ellison) is humorous enough by itself, but ciety,
combined with performances so bad that they can only
The top three entries will be
be called non-acting, the film is carried beyond normal awarded prizes regardless of the
mediocrity into the realm of the really ghastly.
decision of the Orchestra Society.
First prize will be a $50 Savings
Bond, second prize a half series
ticket and third prize four pairs
hollow
and
ruthless
We follow a handsome, spiritually
of Pop Concert tickets.
leading-man type from his gutter beginnings to his Oscar
If an entry is selected for use,
nomination. He has a certain animal magnetism about a slight variation in design may
all
the
civilized
precludes
and
code
that
of
a personal
him
be made to facilitate printing,
virtues as well as any vestige of decent manners. Through according to Judith W. Hanlon,
his fierce determination and his totally social immorality, Chairman.
he is able to rip and claw his way to the top of the HollyThe design must be in black
wood garbage heap. But this interesting story is ruined and white, include the title,
completely by a nice juxtaposition of awful acting, in- “Overature,” Buffalo Philharmoncompetent direction, amateurish photography and light- ic Orchestra, Lucas Foss, Conductor and Musical Director, Kleining, stupid writing and no point of view whatsoever.
hans Music Hall and a space for
the date. It must be 9” wide and
Let’s get to the film itself so you’ll get an idea of 13t4” high.
Entries will be accepted at the
what actually happens. First, the hero, is played by
Stephen Boyd. He looks right and tries hard, but that’s Philharmonic House, 26 Richmond Ave., Monday through Fri-

Oddly enough, the story itself is rather interesting.

where it ends. I kept waiting for him to saddle his
chariot and charge off after Charlton Heston that would
have been more natural than his attempts to project such
complex emotions as anger, happiness, grief and fear
from time to time. Boyd is actually rather good, though,
in comparison with his two lady loves. The first is
played by Jill St. John, and although one tends to disbelieve most of the stories about how a starlet structured
her career upon her extra-curricular sexual escapades,
it probably is the case from time to time and Jill St.
John’s performance (? ?) gave me the feeling that this
might just be one of those times. One of the funniest
moments in recent cinema history occurs during her
psychological breakdown early in the story.

It isn't just the girls though. Tony Bennet, who is
supposedly a singer in real life, plays the hero’s side-kick
(named Hymie Kelly by the way
the movie milks the
obvious to the point of nausea) with the heartfelt fervor
of a man who has just been sold a rotten used car. Tie
seems very concerned, he knows something is wrong, but
he can’t quite put his finger on it and nobody gives a
damn anyway. As a matter of fact, the best acting in
the movie is done by Milton Berle, that beloved old
character-actor and raconteur.
And there are other
equally inept efforts, but why go on? Most of it has
to be seen to believed anyway, and I feel that the fault
probably lies in the writing and direction even more
than in the bad acting. Paul Scofield would be at a
loss to infuse any life into these lines, but then, he
wouldn’t be in a picture like this in the first place.
.

.

.

ALPHA GAMMA DELTA
The winners of the ten-dollar
gift certificates in the drawing
last Thursday were Cynthia Oster
of Alpha Gamma Delta and a
brother of Phi Kappa Psi. Alpha
Gamma Delta will donate the proceeds to the Easter Seals Association.
ALPHA PHI DELTA
Alpha Phi Delta will hold an
informal closed party with Alpha
Kappa Psi Friday night at the
Club Bar.
BETA SIGMA RHO
The pledge class of Beta Sigma
Rho will present their annual
spring pledge party Saturday,
April 16, at the Beta Sig Hall.
Preparations are being made for
Beta Sig’s last Beer Blast in May.
GAMMA PHI
Tomorrow night Gammi Phi
will hold their 8th Annual Sweetheart Dance at the Parkridge
“300'’. The Mello-Tones will provide the music.
Officers of the Spring Pledge
class are Dave Clark, President,
and Mike Skinner, Treasurer.

As Frank Sinatra (who has a ridiculous bit part at
the end) said to Harlan Ellison in Jilly’s, “I’ve seen it
and it’s crap.” My Jfirst inclination was to summarize
the whole ludicrous affair by suggesting that it will be
a major part of the camp canon of the middle ’70's. But
something occurred to me. The damn thing is so bad
and so stupidly funny that it is actually camp already!
That’s what you’ve done, Joe Levine, the creation of
Instant Camp
and according to the latest news reports
tjn&gt;f nnt

mniwv

&lt;Mi.

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
The Western New York Spring
Conference of IVCF is being held
this weekend (April 15 to 17) at
Canandaigua Lake. A model missionary film entitled “Unto Every
Creature” will be shown Friday,
April 22, at 7:30 p.m. at the
regular IVCF meeting, at which
time the election of next year’s

officers will be held. Those tak-

ing part in IVOF’s Community
Aid Corp project (Saturday, April
23) must be at the Child Care
Center ready to paint at 9 ajn.
You will he contacted regarding
transportation. Reservations for
the Fellowship Supper (Friday,
May 6) must be made by April
30 by signing the list in the (310

office.

Newman

The Newman Apostolate is
sponsoring a social tonight at 8
p.m. at Newman Hall. Admission
is free and everyone is invited

PHI EPSILON PI

All fraternities and sororities
interested in joining our volunteer work at the Veterans’ Hospital, St. Mary’s, and Project
Able, contact Bob Beck at the
table.
Saturday night is “Phi Ep Night
at Kleinhans,” for the play "Barefoot in the Park.”
PHI KAPPA PSI
Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity, under
the leadership of Maximilian
Wolf, will march their forces past
the Rio Grande this weekend to
conquer Mexico City. A Tequila
Party will take place Saturday
night in honor of the victory at
the Hotel Worth, just outside of
Juarez.
PI LAMBDA TAU
Pi Lambda Tau Fraternity will
hold a casual Date Party tomorrow evening at the Nile Owl.
SIGMA

ALPHA MU

Sigma Alpha Mu would like to
thank Fra’s Root and Denny for
a great M—t-t-n party last Saturday. The brothers are planning
a New Year’s Party next Friday.

“THE GROUP”,

to attend. On Wednesday, April
20, Dr. Olive Lester will speak

on “Prejudices: What is a Bigot?”
at 8 p.m. in 329 Norton. The Annual Awards Banquet will be held
on April 27 at 6:30 p.m. at the
La Hacienda (3734 Sheridan
Drive). Reservations are $3.50 per

person and may be obtained at
Newman Hall. The Newman Educational Weekend will be held in
Troy, New York, on April 29 and
30 and May 1.

—CORRECTION—
The present Inter-Resid e n c e Council officers
are: President—Gary E.
Roberts, Vice President
—Mike Kayes, Secretary
—Paulette Bohnen, and
Treasurer
Andrea
Roth.
-

—

f

CHARLES K FELDMAN

IMS WCTUWC IS RECOM MlNOC P IOR AOUlTS

J

Mnu thg

UNITED ARTISTS

A SAM trivia team will be on
WKBW-TV Monday night at 8:30.
SIGMA DELTA TAU
Sigma Delta Tau extends special congratulations to Elaine
Greenberg on being elected First

Vice President of the Pan-Hellenic Council. Congratulations also
to Sue Landerson, who was elected to the University College Senate. Seniors Diane Sezzen and
Cindy Perl will be honored at
the Scholarship Tea Sunday,
April 17. Officers of the Spring
Pledge class are; President, Carol
Shapiro; Vice President, Patty
Wartley; Secretary, Audrey Cash;
and Treasurer, Diane Seeger. The
pledge class will do volunteer
work at St. Rita’s Home Saturday,
April 16.
SIGMA PHI EPSILON
Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity
will hold a social with three floors
of Goodyear Dorm tonight. “The
Cavemen" will provide the music
at the Hotel Worth. This Sunday
they will hold a Religious Breakfast in Norton Hall at 11:00. A
Drive-in Party is planned for
tomorrow.

TAU KAPPA EPSILON

[

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'■*

I no
/

pmnution aiai,Mni

■«

Will
it
•UT

icCatHT

AmJimt Cinema

8500 MAIN ST.71:47656) 645 MAIN ST, TL-3-8006

Tau Kappa Epsilon will have a
social with Sigma Kappa Phi Friday, April 15, at 9 p.m. in the
Lorr Lounge, 220 Lakewood
Pkwy. Watch for the “Swingin’
Spring Colt ’45 Blast" coming up
April 22nd.

THETA CHI
Discount subscriptions to Playboy magazine can be obtained
from the pledges of Theta Chi.
The fraternity will sponsor a
“Doc Urich Day” in the coming
week.

THETA CHI
Theta Chi sorority is sponsoring Dr. Katkin, from the Psychology Department, for Mr. Faculty.
Pat Pecora has been elected Historian of the Pan Hellenic Council. A party will be held at the
Hotel Worth tonight at 8:30.

MSIHB

PIZZA
IF 3-1344

...

form tho tmtiallv nniwIUkk

1/Qelifyion On C^ampuA

HELD OVER!
&gt;

Which brings up the question: Why was this movie
made? When you see that it was produced by Joseph
Levine, that well-known patron of the arts, the answer
becomes obvious that is, MONEY. I have no objections,
but for chrissake, how about a little entertainment too?
Bosley
the little old lady who writes movie
reviews for the August New York Times, wondered why
Hollywood persists in fouling its own nest with movies
like this. The answer, Bosley, is that a movie like this
will feather that nest so opulently that the stench will
be overlooked.

between 1 and 6 p.m.
All interested applicants should

submit their name, address, phone
number and the name of the
college they attend to the Philharmonic House before April 30.

GBEEK NOTES

-

And as laughable as her “serious” moments are,
they don’t sink much below Elke Sommer’s efforts. Miss
Sommers is also very pretty and in this case, very inadequate, but she has the advantage of a European accent
and this lends an exotic quality to her ranting.

day between 1-4 p.m. and on
Saturdays, April 30 and May 7,

4 10 A NO

•

00

�Friday, April 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

Dance Group to Perform
In Baird Hall Tomorrow

The Mary Anthony Dance Company will perform a modern
dance, “Threnody,” tomorrow at
8:30 p.m. in Baird Hall.

“Threnody" was choreographed
by Mary Anthony and inspired by
John M. Synge’s tragedy “Riders
to the Sea.” The score was composed for the dance by opera
composer Benjamin Britton.
Anatole Chujoy of Dance News
said that “Threnody” tells “the
age old story of the cruel sea demanding its victims, and the tragedy of the women left behind.
“Threnody’ is presented in a
dance language of stark simplicity which strengthens the exposi-

tion of the story. The economy of

choreographer is admirable.”
Miss Anthony has served as
choreographer for the television
series “Look Up and Live” and
“Lamp Unto My Feet.” She has
also choreographed Italian musicals in Rome, and an Italian
Weekly Television program, “Can-

zonissima.”
The company has appeared at
American dance festivals in Con-

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Tha Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the SPECTRUM
assumes no editorial responsibility, Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday
prior to the week of publication.
Student organization notices are
not accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
Pre-registration for the 1966
Summer Session (day courses)—
registration forms may be obtained in the Office of Admissions and Records beginning Monday, April 18. Students registering through the Graduate School
must secure their registration

movement here practiced by the

Mary Anthony Dane* Group to
appoar in Threnody.

necticut, Jacob’s Pillow, Massachusetts, and New York City.
The program is sponsored by
the Union Board Dance Committee. Admission will be students—-

$.50, faculty, staff—$1.00, general
—$1.50.

PAGE SEVEN

cards and instructions in Acheson
103. Students in other Graduate
divisions (Education, Business Administration, and Social Welfare)
may secure forms in the Admissions and Records Office.
Advance registration for the
Summer Session may be completed between April 18 and May
20 in the Office of Admissions

and Records.

Advance registration schedule
for day students taking Millard
Fillmore College Summer

Eve-

ning Courses) —students currently registered in any day school
division may pre-register for Millard Fillmore College 1966 summer evening courses during the
week of April 25-28 (Monday
through Thursday) only. Regis-

tration materials will be issued
from 9 a.m. to noon, and collected
from I p.m. to 4 p.m., at the Millard Fillmore College Reception
Center, 177 Hayes Hall. Day students may pick up and return advance registration materials at
their convenience during the specified hours on any of the four
days. All courses, regardless of
course number or level, are open
to day students who have the
standard prerequisites, subject
only to the usual limitations in
class size in certain courses.
Day students who wish to take
summer evening classes, but who
do not register in advance, must
attend the regular registration
for 1966 summer evening courses
which will be held in Clark Gymnasium on Thursday, June 2, from
6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
University College students
(except those on strict academic
probation) the remaining dates
to pre-register for fall semester
1966 are as follows:
April 18 through April 22
G, P, I

Office, Schoellkopf Hall, telephone 831-3311.
Career related opportunities

are available with the student

summer placement division. The
following companies will hold oncampus interviews concerning
these employment opportunities:
April 18—Alcoa, Cutco Division,
Buffalo (all majors, interest in
Marketing)
April 19—American Telephone
and Telegraph (engineering candidates)
Apirl 20
Continental Can
Co., Tonawanda (engineering can—

didates)

Please register for the above
interviews at the Placement Office at least two days prior to
the interview date. Twenty minute interviews will be conducted
between 9 a m and 5 p.m.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
April 15
U.S. Army Electronics Com-

mand
April 18
Erie County Dept, of Personnel
Arlington County Public Sch.
(Va.)

April 19

American Telephone and Telegraph Co.
Theodore Roosevelt Elementary
School (Chcektowaga)

—

At Liberty' and 'Smythe' Reviewed
By LYNNE BERNSTEIN

—

April 25 through April 29

The stage is silent. A woman
shuffles to the worn couch in her
frumpy bathrobe and pincurlers
and waits. Suddenly the tenseness is pierced by a mad, drunken
giggle, and you are off in a whirlwind of emotional experience,
beginning nowhere in time, and
ending there. At Liberty by Tennessee Williams is merely a
sketch of a disease ridden, once
popular performer who fools no
one in her pretense at happiness.
The play traces the feelings of
the woman, calmed by her “long
suffering” mother, as she realizes
that she is not at liberty to live.
Although the play itself is a
rather poor attempt at artistic
realism, the performance and
production was of extremely high

May 2 through May 6

LOST AND FOUND
MAN'S dark leather wallet; important papers; please return
to lost and found at Norton
Union.
WANTED

TWO PEOPLE to sublet 3M&gt;-room
apt.,
10-minute walk from
campus; occupancy June 1-Sept.
1; $80 month. Call Steve or Gene,

831-3552.

TRAVEL
UB JET FLIGHT

to France leav

ing June 27, returning Sept. 5.
Round-trip NYC-Paris, $340. Faculty, students, employees of
SUNYAB eligible. Contact Stanford Leff soon! 834-1869.
FOR RENT

APT.—UB area (available June 1)
completely furnished two bedroom duplex, new kitchen. 8377258.
1 ROOM APT. to sublet for sum
mer, 15 ride from campus (bus-

line). Call 886-6763.

FOR SALE
MUST SELL girl’s Raleigh 26”
9 speed bicycle, excellent condition, lights, back carrier. Eileen,

TF 8-1614.
MICROSCOPE, Bausch and Lomb,
monocular with all attachments.
Recent.model. Call 885-2498.

—

B, F

PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Summer Employment —students

interested in part-time, and fulltime summer employment should
register now at the Placement

Murder
Fay Daltner and Susan Kaplan appear in Student Theatre Guild
production of Tenesee Williams' "At Liberty".
Pholo by Alm Grubrr
quality. The semi-bare stage al- “You can discuss departure from
lowed you to concentrate fully the rules, but you cannot depart
on the acting and the effects it from them.'' Humorous, but more
produced. Sue Kaplan’s perform- than that.
ance as the mother was beautiful,
Although the beginning of the
combining the resignedness of a play was drawn out, redeemed
mother and the hopefulness of only by an occasional clever roua woman. Fay Datner had a sometine by Miss Jameson, played by
what more difficult role to enact Sandra Klein, from the moment
as the daughter, having to switch of Lebert Puma’s appearance on
from drunkenness to feverishness, stage as Mr. Bently, there were
to despair in the short timespan. no complaints. Lenny Horwitz,
Her performance was, thus, less however, did not carry over his
polished. However, she did a role as the meek, trapped man
good job in spite of the diffi- well until the very end. He acted
culty.
like a college student trying to
ham up a scene, than a confused,
Smythe by Doctor Coleman is bumbling, and bumbled man.
an entirely different kind of
play.
It could even be a bad
April 21
dream, so grotesque does it apDeadline for the
pear. However, the play hints
too strongly of reality, making it
New Student Review
a satire on red tape and policies.
mma:
mmm
Business policies to be specific.
Mr. Smythe is trying to be “identified”, presumably for a job or
for a benefit of some sort. This is

irrelevant, however. What actual-

ly crushes laughter is the feelign
of inadequacy a man must feel
when confronted by the Rules
and thfe System. When Mr.
Smythe presents his birth certificate as evidence of his identity,
he is asked, “But is this really
you?” The man is powerless. At
another point in the play, the
Under Secretary, Mr. Bently, says,

SPECIAL
BOCCE PARTY
RATES AVAILABLE

Aetna Insurance Co.
Oscar Mayer &amp; Co.
Addressograph Multigraph
Continental Can Co., Inc.
North Shore Central School
District No. 1 (Long Island)
April 21
Federal Aviation Agency
Public Schools of the 22nd Dis■

trict of Columbia

April 22
Roche Laboratories

of Gonzago

from Pg. 4)
Print Award
Judge Emmet
To Federal
Claire who sentenced
David
Mitchell III to five years in prison for burning his draft card
as a protest against the Selective
ervice System and the war in
Viet Nam and recommended that
he be ineligible for parole after
two years goes our Humanitarian
of the Year Award.
(Cont’d

„

CLASSIFIED

—

W, D

April 20

To the British Communist Party
who recently changed the name
of their newspaper from the
Daily Worker to the Morning
Star in order to apeal, according
to a brochure circulated among
London advertising agencies, to
people in the high income A B
class. The brochuree also contained a picture of a typical
Daily Worker family complete
with a dream kitchen and well
fed cat. To the Morning Star
goes our “Arise Ye Prisoners of
Starvation" Award,
To Secretary of Agriculture
Freeman who went to Viet Nam
as an expert in order to initiate
a bigger food program in ac-

cordance with Johnson’s Declaration of Honolulu and according
to the Feb. 14 edition of the

New

York

Times ‘‘At

a

ware-

house in Phanrang
he picked
up a handful of vegetables with
red skins and exclaimed to a
group of aides standing behind
him You can sure tell these arc
onions! Just smell! ‘That's garlic,’
someone replied." To Secretary
Freeman goes It's A Good Thing
That He Isn't Secretary of Defense Award.
...

And finally this column was
planning to give an award to
Chiang Kai Shck who was recently reelected to head the National Chinese government in
free, honest democratic elections
opposed to the elections on
the mainland where only the
Communist Party is allowed) but,

(as

curiously enough, nobody ran
against him. To Chiange Kai Shek
who was reelected to head the
Nationalist Chinese government
in free, honest democratic elections goes our It's Easy When
You Are The Only Candidate
Award.

�PACE EIGHT

� sips®v
=/■
—f

of
writs of articks
writtan exclusively for the
Spectrum by Head Football
Coach Richard "Doc Urich)
(on*

Friday, April 15, IN*

SPECTRUM

•

A number of students have
asked what is my philosophy of
football and of coaching football. These are questions not
easily answered, but I will do
my best.
First of all, and most important, it must be remembered that
football is a game of bodily contact. Unless a boy enjoys this
sort of thing there is no real
place for him in football. This
love of bodily contact is the
first thing I look for in a prospective football player. The
next thing I am interested in
is sizing up a boy for his speed.
There can 'be no substitute for
speed and agility. Give me a
boy who enjoys hitting and is
fast and agile and I’ll show you
a football player.
Football coaching is basically
a teaching situation. A coach
may be a veritable genius at describing plays on the blackboard,
but if he can't clearly present
his technique to the players his
value as a coach is extremely
minimized. A coach should set
up his system to get the most
from his material, rather than
try to fit his material into a
pre-conceived mold. For example,

--tA

-i

I prefer an offense with lots of
passing and I want to institute
such an offense at UB. However,
if I find that I don’t have the
throwers and receivers to play
this type of game I shall make
the necessary adjustments.
Our spring practice has been
progressing steadily despite some
unseasonable cold and damp
weather the first week. I am
frankly impressed with the hard
hitting and agressiveness displayed by the boys on the team.
It augurs well for a successful
season.
We hold scrimmage every Wednesday and Saturday afternoon.
So far, I have been working all
players on both offense and defense, but I expect to change

to separate

The weather finally broke this
week, and no one could have
been happier than UB football
coach iDoc Urich. After a week
of practice handicapped by adverse weather conditions, Urich
and his capable coaching crew
were finally able to make some
headway when the weatherman
complied with the coaches wishes.
With temperature in the forties
and turf firm enough for cleats
to dig into, the coaching staff
was able to put the 80-some squad
candidates through a series of
well-disciplined drills. All squad
including last year’s
members
lettermen
were tested at
various positions, an experiment
designed to find the proper positions for the players.
—

—

offensive and defensive platoons by the end of
Urioh 'has emphasized the imthis month. At that time you
should begin to have at least a portance of the proper evaluaunder
rough idea of how things will tion of personnel, and
look in the fall.
the former Notre Dame assistant’s
I am extremely pleased with watchful eye
this first objecthe interest shown by the students in their football team. Of tive is being carried out.
course, you are welcome to come
It is still too early for Urich
out any of our practice sessions,
which will become more interestto have decided anything definite
ing as we go along.
about the aggressive, spirited
Again, thanks to the Spectrum
group out for the team, but
for giving me this space and
the
please feel free to contact me thanks to the weatherman
regarding any questions you may picture is beginning to focus in
have on UB football.
a burry.
—

—

—

—

per.
1. Who was Hondo Hurricane?

2. What high school did Oscar
Robertson attend?
3. What was the name of Buddy Ryan's pet exercise for his
gym class?
4. What boxer was called the
"Little Cerdan?”
5. Who was the only major
league baseball player born in
Czechoslovakia?
5. Who won the featured race
at Batavia Downs on the closing
night of the fall season in December, 1964?
7. Who was third string quarterback for the New York Giants
in 1956?
8. What are the three qualities
Len Serfustinj seeks in a prospective athlete?

OFFENHAMER

TESTIMONIAL
A testimonial dinner honoring
Dick Offenhamer, retiring UB
football coach, will be given by
a group of his friends and associates on April 28, at 7 p.m. in
the Chinese Room of the Park
Lane Hotel, Delaware Avenue at
Gates Circle.
UB basketball coach Len Serfustini and UB sports publicist
Joe Marcin are co-chairmen of the
affair.
Reservations are limited and
may be made by sending a check
for $20 to Dr. Len Serfustini at
Clark Gym.

9.

(h=

Grid Drills Continue

SPORTS TRIVIA

All entries for today's sports
trivia contest must be handed
to the sports desk of the Spectrum by Monday. Prize-winners
of and answers to today’s quiz
will appear in next Friday’s pa-

Who led the New York-Penn

League in homers in 1965?

10. On the back of whose baseball card (Yankees, 1950-56) does
following blurb
the
appear:
“Charlie is the best bench jockey
in both leagues.”
Last week’s prize-winner was
Pete Braunschweig, who correct_

UB Football Squad

goat

The incredibly brief volleyball

season came to a close this Wed-

The Varsity and Freshman
track teams, which open their
seasons at Colgate next Wednesday, face bleak seasons unless
they are bolstered at many posi-

tions.

This year’s team turnout is the
smallest in Coach Emery Fisher’s
IS years at UB. At present the
Varsity has only one shot putter,
one discus and javelin thrower,
one high jumper, two hurdlers,
one 440 and 880 runner, one pole
vauKer and one triple jumper.
The personnel problem is just
as discouraging with the Fresh-

ly answered nine of the ten questions. Pete’s only incorrect an- men—only 14 applicants mean
swer was on the first question. there are plenty of openings on
the roster.
The answers:
The present Varsity outlook is
1. Don Lofgran (USF) 2. Ed
as follows. Cross-country letterMiksis 3. Lou Ambers 4. Gordie Soltau
5. Celtic Ash
6. men are manning the distance
events with Dick Genau, Bob
Ponca City, Oklahoma
7. Lawson Little
8. Baron Von Cramm Stephenson and Jack Kerns the
runners. Larry Nauham is handl9. Hank Moreno
10. 50.

nesday and Thursday. The league

leaders before the fiinal matches
were as follows;

Wednesday League

Division I
W L

Division II
W L
1 APD
7 1
2 Super Apes 6 2

,

L
0

3
3

The fencing tournament, under
the direction of Varsity Coach
Sid Schwartz, will be held on

Thursday, April 21. Registration
for the tourney was held last
night at Clark Gym.

The final intramural sport,
track, will be held on Monday,
April 25, at p.m. All entries—which must be made on official
intramural entry blanks—must be
handed to the intramural office

by next Friday, April 22.
Events to be held are: 75-yard
dash, 100-yard dash, mile run,
300-yard shuttle relay, 440-yard
relay, shot put, broad jump and
high jump. A contestant may

enter two events and one relay.
All trophies and awards will
be given at the Intramural

Awards Dinner to be held in
Norton Union on May 3. Reservations must be made by April 22.

BOWLING
NEWS

The winners of the new bowl-

ing balls in the “nine-pin strike”
Tournament last weekend in Norton Lanes were Mr. George Maringer and Miss Pam Krauter.
Gift certificates for second places
were won by Mr. John Kujawa
and Miss Barbara Scorr and for
third places by 'Mr. Wayne Bvelo
and Miss Sue Karpito.
Mr. Malinger bowled a 711

three game total

winning

the

The Skanks will play
Sigma Alpha Mu on
WKBW-TV April 18 in
a Trivia Tournament to
be taped April 15 at
WKBW at 8. Free tickets for the taping may
be obtained at the Norton Ticket Office.

through wind sprints
Photo

by Iran

Makuch

UB Track Team
Faces Dilemma

INTRAMURALS
Joques
7
Alpha Sig 6
Thursday League
Division I
Division II
W
W L
8
Sig Ep
7 1 AEPi
Gam’a Phi 6 2 SAM
5
Theta Chi 5

x

*

men’s

division. Miss Krauter
needed only 551 to win the
women’s division.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

the 440 and Jack Mrawka the 880.
Seniors who are student-teaching, and thereby only able to
practice two days a week on campus, are sprinter Jim Webber,
sprinter and jumper Norm Keller
and half-miler Pat Uuffoletto.
Injuries to 440-man Dennis Czaja
—broken wrist; and pole vaulter
Tom Ryan—appendix, have stripped the squad of valuable pointgetters.
Captain Larry Elsie has taken
a full-time job after classes and
is unable to work out properly.
Without a properly conditioned
Elsie
who competes in five
events—UB’s high point man is
lost.
On the bright side of things,
sophomore Mel Spelman, last
year’s Freshman MVP and holder
of all frosh weight records, has
shown signs of becoming a great
asset to the team.
The need for Male thinclads
is desperate at present Any student who desires to help lift the
team that just two years ago won
the State Championship, please
report to Coach Fisher at Rotary
Field today at 4 p.m. or tomorrow at 11:30 a.m.
VARSITY SCHEDULE
April 20—at Colgate
April 23—at Brockport
April 26—Canisius
April 20—Cortland
—

May

jSmii’AC Printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

2—LeMoyne Relays
at Syracuse

May 5—at Ithaca
May 7—UB Invitational
May 10—Niagara
May 21—State Championships
at Troy

Baseball, Tennis
Squads at ECTI
The

Parlntri
&amp;

ing the hurdles, Mike Alspaugh

13 baseball and tennis

teams, after opening their respective seasons by hosting BCTI
Thursday, travel to BCTI to face

the same teams this afternoon.
Either Don Potwora or Ron McEwan is expected to get the
mound call against the Kats today
as the Bulls seek their eighth
straight WNY hardball crown.
Bill Sanford's formidable tennis
contingent is a heavy favorite
to overwhem the ECU netmen
in their return match today.

�</text>
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                    <text>EXTRA
VOLUME 16

btate

EXTfBil
NO.

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1966

36

TRUSTEES TO FINALIZE
MEYERSON SELECTION
AS UB PRESIDENT
The appointment of Martin Meyerson as President of the State University at Buffalo will be finalized
tomorrow at a meeting of the State
University Board of Trustees to be
held at the State University of Stony
Brook.
Born in New York City, he received his bachelor of arts degree from
Columbia University in 1942 and master of city planning from Harvard in
1949. Meyerson is currently serving
as Dean of the College of Environmental Design of the University of
California at Berkeley where he also
served as Acting Chancellor at the
tail e n d of the demonstrations last
year.

Among the positions he held before going to Berkeley included Williams Professor of Ciiy Planning and
Research at Harvard and director of
the Joint Center for Urban Studies at
both Harvard and the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
Meyerson will replace Hr. Clifford
C. Furnas who will conclude eleven
years of service as both Chancellor
and President of the University on
Dr. Furnas'
August 1 bt this year.
resignation, submitted to State University President Samuel B. Gould in
April 1964, was necessitated by State
University policy which requires that
all administrative personnel retire following their 65th birthday.
SELECTION PROCESS
The selection of the new president
is basically a three-stage process involving State University of Buffalo
faculty, an appointed Council Committee and, finally, the State University Board of Trustees and Dr. Samuel
Gould, President of the State University

The criteria for selection chosen

by the faculty and Council Committees
included scholarly accomplishment,

previous

administrative

experience,

ability to publicly interpret the uni-

Martin Meyerson, New UB President

versity’s role, a concern for academic
freedom, and sensitivity toward faculty responsibility.
The Council Committee, headed by
Council President Seymour H. Knox
and consisting of eight members,
screened more than one-hundred thirty names, before deciding upon Meyerson as their first choice.
NO COMMENT
While Mr.' Meyerson acknowledged that he had been contacted to
assume the Presidency of UB. he reserved all comment until such time
as the Board of Trustees finalize the
appointment. Similarly, Dr. Westley
Roland. Secretary to the Council Committee and Assistant to President Furnas, has reserved all comment.

�PAGE TWO

Thursday, April 14, 1966

SPECTRUM

|

I

Martin Meyerson, who will assume the role of University President

Clifford

C.

Furnas

on August 1, has become, at 43,

one of the nation's leading urban
planners. The
former acting
Chancellor at the Berkeley branch
of the University of California
was selected over approximately
130 applicants.
Born in New York City on November 14, 1922, Mr. Meyerson
completed
undergraduate
his
work at Columbia University in
1942. After graduating with a
B.A., he qualified for a Wheelwright Fellowship in the Masters
of Community Planning program
at Harvard University. He received his masters degree in 1949.
Even before his graduation
from Harvard, Mr. Meyerson held
positions of responsibility. From
1943 to 1944. he served as re-

search assistant and staff member
to the American Society of Planning Officials. The following
year he worked on the Philadelphia City Planning Committee,
Also in 1945, he married Margy
Ellin Lazarus. They now have two

children, Adam and Laura.
In 1948 Mr. Meyerson began his
teaching profession

by

joining

the faculty of the University of
Chicago as Assistant Professor
of Social Sciences. During his
term at the Midwestern university, he also sat on the Yale University Committee for National
Policy. His activities in Chicago
included the job of planning its
Michael Reese Hospital.
Mr. Meyerson left Chicago in

1952 to become associate research

professor of urban studies at the
University of Pennsylvania. While
serving on the American Council
to Improve Our Neighborhoods,
which was to soon place him in
national prominence, he became
a full professor in 1956.

The next year he returned to
the scene of his graduate studies,
becoming the Williams Professor
of City Planning and Urban Research at Harvard. At the same
time he attained renown in scholarly circles by editing the “Metropolis in Ferment,” in the November, 1957 issue of The Annals
of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. A series of articles on the future of
the cities, his essay, in collaboration with Barbara Terrett, points
out the problems and possible
solutions for today’s urban plan-

•

m

ners. Entitled “Metropolis Lost,
Metropolis Regained,” the “authors hope for a notably improved
modns vivendi between the races
in the next twenty-five years because of such probabilities as the
decreasing size of Negro households and upgrading in educational attainment."
Dedicated to the ideals of slum
clearance, property improvement,
new housing, and effective urban
planning, Mr. Meyerson became

Vice-President of the American
Council to Improve Our Neighborhoods (ACTION) in 1957.
By 1958 he had risen to the
chair of acting dean of the Graduate School of Design at Harvard. Then, in 1959, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
and Harvard teamed-up to establish a point urban studies program. Endowed with a $675,000
Ford Foundation grant, the two
schools selected Buffalo’s new
president to head the center. At
that time, the New York Times
said that, “The center will be international in scope, intended to
provide a stimulating environment
for scholars engaged in urban
research in the United States and
abroad.”

Following his appointment, Mr.
Meyerson spoke at a conference
of professional planners in Minneapolis. There, the Tima* re-

ports, he claimed “that the American public was demanding a
‘new diversity’ in community facilities and services that must
be met
“Mr. Meyerson suggested that
civic innovations might include
Swedish-type apartment houses,
offering household services such
as

cooking,

nurseries, laundry

and recreational facilities attractive to working mothers.”

Meanwhile, again in cooperation with Barbara Terrett and
ACTION, Mr. Meyerson had three
books published. One, Housing,
People and Cities, is part of an
eight book series put out by
ACTION on housing and community development. The volume is
seen by the author as “the culmination of a five-year investigation of impediments to the improvement of housing and urban
environment.”

His two other works are Face
of the Metropolis, and Politics,

Planning, and

Public Interest.
The last book deals with the
problem of public housing in
Chicago.

While serving at Harvard, Mr.
then a recognized
authority in bis field, also held
other positions. For instance, he
sat on the bousing panel for the
White House Office of Science
and Technology, the area Development Committee of the Commission for Economic Development, and the United Nations
Conference for Less Developed
Areas. Also under the auspices of
the u!n., he traveled on missions
to Japan and Indonesia.
Finally, in 1963, Mr. Meyerson
joined the faculty of the University of California at Berkeley.
At that time he served as Dean
of the College of Environmental
Design. In 1965, while the crisis
over free speech was reaching its
turbulent climax, he was appointed acting chancellor of the university. While ann|ouncin|g his
selection, Clark Kerr, President
of the University of California
system, acclaimed Mr. Meyerson
as, “one of the leading American
authorities on urban growth and
Meyerson, by

planning,”

�Thursday, April 14, 1966

SPECTRUM

MEVERSON

Amid demonstrations, arrests,
and a break down of studentfaculty relations, Mr. Martin Meyerson became acting chancellor
at the Berkley Division of the
University of California, January
3. 1965.
Supporting a philosophy, “Civil
disobedience is warrented as a
last resort in our democracy,” he
played a major role in resolving
the conflict over university regulations on campus political activity.

Moving up from the dean's
chair of the College of Environmental Design after the former
Chancellor Edward W. Strong
resigned, Mr. Meyerson was faced
with the problem of pacifying
both the left wing Free Speech
Movement and the strong conservative minority on the 24man Board of Regents.

From the start, he planned to
impose relatively few rules on
student political activity, saying
that, “By definition, provisional
rules are expected to change.”

A liberal himself, the acting
chancellor soon found himself
opposed to student agitation for
the right to utter words not ordinarily used in conversation. In
a statement to the New York
Times, Mr, Meyerson pointed out,

“The four letter word signs and
utterances had a significance beyond their shock impact. They
also symbolize intolerance for the
rights and feelings of others.”

This dilemma, plus reoccuring
disputes with some regents,
brought his resignation on March
9. Clark Kerr, president of the
nine-school University of Cali-

AND
and however their palpitating
hearts desire.”
After a five and one-half hour
emergency meeting of the Board
of Regents, Meyerson and Kerr
withdrew their statements of resignation. The Herald Tribune

PAGE THREE

Berkeley
port, Mr. Meyerson proceeded to
handle the four-letter-word agitation. He set up an ad hoc committee on the matter, and demanded the immediate dismissal
of the “dirty word” demonstrators. On April 22, Mr. Meyerson

the students and non-students involved to cease their actions. He
said at the time that student
conduct should be largely selfregulated, but not merely by
student conscience.

fornia system, also decided to
step down. “The Regents should
have an opportunity to recognize
the oldest and largest campus,”
Mr. Meyerson explained in his

resignation.

By the end of May, the acting
chancellor had eased the Berkeley campus back on to a smooth
course. The culmination of the
hostilities between the students
and administration was expressed
in a new code of regulations for
student conduct.

In an editorial, the New York
Herald Tribune pointed out that
their resignations, “would be a
setback not only to one of the
nation’s most important institutions of higher education, but
also to the principle of responsibility' and good order, on which
academic freedom is based . . .
That the undergraduates may
have cause for their disturbance
(mental, sexual and what-not) is
not in dispute. Their complaints
about lack of political freedom
on the campus last fall were pretty well satisfied. They had to
find other expression for their
general discontent
(indicating
that the basic issue is not their
freedom at all), so they are now
rocing a fight for the right to
use four-letter words wherever

THE

The code states that, “Students
have the right of free expression
and advocacy. The time, plflce
and manner of exercising speech
and political activity shall be

subject to regulations adopted by
the chancellors of the respective
campuses.”

On the sphere of student discipline: “A student may not be
disciplined for off-campus con-

duct unless such conduct affects
his suitability as a student. Political action, as such, shall not
be deemed to affect suitability.”
A report from a 10-member faculty committee appointed by acting chancellor Meyerson came
out highly critical of Berkeley's
university-student relationships,

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acting chancellor had a similar
crisis, as a 24-page magazine,
Spider, he had ordered banned
from campus continued to be
sold. Acting on the grounds that
the language of some of the
articles were opposed to good
taste, Mr, Meyerson again ordered

In A Lighter Moment

took such action, by ordering
Arthur L. Goldberg to leave the
school and by suspending three
others.

A leader of the campus cam-

paign for free speech, Mr. Goldberg’s dismissal was followed by
another volly of student protest.

However, this time the militant
speakers were faced with lagging
student support. Their pleas were
in vain.
Earlier the following week the

CONGRATULATIONS
TO OUR
NEW
PRESIDENT
FROM THE

THE

The Times reported that the
“committee had found that the
university had failed to take
cognizance of 'a significant and
growing minority of students who
want to lead lives less tied to financial return than to social
awareness and responsibility.’
”

On July 27, Mr. Meyerson returned to his post in the College
of Environmental Design, as

Roger W. Hcyns was appointed

chancellor.

SPECTRUM

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

Thursday, April 14, 1966

SPECTRUM

A HISTORY OF THE18460

Founded on the eve of the Civil
War, the University of Buffalo
has grown from a one department
institution into a major complex
of higher education. Under departing President Clifford C. Furnas, the University has been guided to the threshold of another
era of expansion, as an entirely
new and unique campus stands
only a few years away.
The growth process has been
long and tedious. It had its origin

in 1836, when the city of Buffalo,
was a rich and flourishing young
city, the Queen of the Great
Lakes, stepping stone from east
to west. In that year, prominent
Buffalonians became interested in

establishing a university. Largely
through the efforts of U.S. Representative Millard Fillmore, a
charter was procured from the
state incorporating the University

of Western New York
The following year was marked

by a nationwide depression and
the plans for a great university
were forgotten. Within ten years,
however, the plans were revived
—permanently.

The founders of the University
of Buffalo were largely prominent physicians. They argued for
not only a medical school, but a
complete and diversified university. They specifically wanted to
include academic, theological, and
law departments in addition to
a medical school.

A charter was granted to the
on May 11, 1846.
The charter provided for a 16man Council to be elected by the
share holders of the corporation.
The Mayor was to serve as an
ex-officio member of and each of
the various faculties was to be
represented on the council. Appointments of all officers, including the chancellor, were to be
made by the council upon nomination by faculty members. Millard Fillmore was the natural
choice for the position of Chancellor; he was Buffalo’s leading
citizen at that time and had devoted much effort towards establishing a university in Buffalo.

first Council

shrunk to nothing if not for a
dedicated faculty and community.
Part of this was due to Fillmore’s
belief that the fees of students
could cover the costs incurred by
the university. No provision was
made for an endowment.

and are now prepared to go on
with their school. All else is
vacant. Reflect, and see if it will
not reproach upon us, if we longer permit our university to exist
with but a single branch in operation.”

Fillmore urged expansion, but
little resulted. At a dedication of
the Univeristy’s first building,
the Chancellor said, “Our citizens
called for and obtained a university charter. Where is your faculty for the department of law?
.
. . Where
are your academic
branches? All wanting. The medical faculty have filled up theirs,

Indeed, the university did operate as a single branch, a med-

The Chancellorship at that time
was merely an honorary position.
Virtually his only duties were to
preside at commencement exercises. Fillmore served in that po-

sition until his death in 1874.
His tenure as Chancellor included his days in the White House

(1850-53).

MILLARD FILLMORE

—

Hi* first UB Chancellor

During that time the university
grew very little and might have

EBEN C. SPRAGUE

ical school, until 1886, when
under the Chancellorship of E.
Carteton Sprague, a department
of Pharmacy was created.
The department of Pharmacy
as did all the professional schools, from a demand by
Buffalo professionals who desired
a school be established in Buffalo
to train young men and women
in their professions. As historian
Julian Park put it in A History
of the University of Buffalo:
“Professional pride was the compelling factor in providing these
forms of technical education . . .
pride in maintaining the best
traditions of their profession and
handing them down intact to the
next generation and after that
to generations of those yet to
come. This pride was of the finest
and most unselfish kind, because
in each case it entailed a large
financial sacrifice on the part of
the teachers of these departments.”

resulted,

Shortly after the Department
of Pharmacy had begun instruction, a Department of Veterinary
Medicine was organized. But the
department never carried on any
instruction because there were
no funds to construct a suitable
building. The project was abandoned, but expansion could not
be stopped.

Chancellor Sprague realized
that a new building was needed;
the brownstone two-story structure at Main and Virginia was
outdated and overcrowded.
Through his influence, a new
building was completed on High
Street in 1808.

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The university was expanded
further in 1891, when an independently established law school
was incorporated, and by the ad
dition of the School of Dentistry
the following year. A School of
Padagogy opened in 1895, but was
discontinued three years later for
lack of funds. The Medical Department of Niagara University
was merged with that of UB in
1898, increasing the faculty.
Under Charles P. Norton, who
became Acting Chancellor in

�no
of
IVERSITY
1954
Thursday, April 14, 1966

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

en strings. Only be exercising the

prerogatives and the responsibilities of freedom do men learn to
be free and to be strong.”
It was under Dr. T. Raymond
McConnell, successor to Dr.
Capen, that the university opened

1905, the university acquired land
and funds needed for further
growth. Although his appointment
to the Chancellorship was in the
ceremonial tradition of his predecessors, he showed foresight and
desire for expansion.
In his first year in office, Norton proposed a million-dollar expansion program to develop a
College of Arts and Sciences, Located on a ten acre tract between
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery
and the Buffalo Historical building, the result would have been
a complete cultural center, blending the facilities of all three.
The idea was rejected as being
too far-reaching and ambitious
for a university lacking endowment and community support.
Norton agreed that his plan was
not suitable; it was not far-reaching enough.

Norton learned that Erie County was to vacate the site of its
county almshouse and hospital on
North Main Street, and proposed
that the university acquire some
of this land for an arts college
and other future needs. The
Council voted to purchase the
property for $54,300, and Norton
turned to the task of procuring
the necessary funds.
He failed to gain the financial
assistance of the city. Moral support was given to the project
by a new requirement of the
American Medical Association
that for a medical school to receive “Grade A” accreditation all
medical students must have at
least one year of liberal arts

its first residence halls and moved
from the status of a “street-car
college” into a role as an institution combining the features of
a residential school and an urban
university. Cook, Sehoellkopf and
Macdonald halls were constructed, providing residence space for
450 students.
UB began, in 1846, as a small
college with one department,
lacking funds and a full-time
ehaneelor. It grew and expanded,
and moved to its present site.
The groundwork was laid for the
work of McConnell’s successor,
Dr. Clifford Furnas

t.

r.

McConnell

UB’s first full-time Chancellor in
1922, and guided the institution
for 28 years. His administration
was a time of change, growth and
innovation. As a result of his
efforts, a loose amalgamation of
independent schools became a coordinated institution, f u 11-time
faculty increased,, physical and
curricular development were undertaken at a steady pace, and
graduate work was instituted.
Foster Hall, the first new building, was dedicated in 1922. What
is now Millard Fillmore College
opened the following year to
make available evening educational opportunities for adults of
the community. Hayes Hall, which
had been the county’s adtilt hospital building, was greatly enlarg-

ed and. reconstructed to become

a part of the university. The
building which served as the

SAMUEL P. CAPEN
training before acceptance. If UB
could not provide this training,
students would have to turn to

other institutions.
In 1915, the Woman’s Educational and Industrial Union of
Buffalo offered its building for
the Arts college with the provision that $100,000 for its endowment be raised within a year.
Mrs. Seymour Knox met this condition when she and her family
donated $250,000 in memory of
Mr. Knox senior.
in 1919, the State Department
of Education authorized the College of Arts and Sciences to confer degrees, and in the next year,
31 faculty members were instructing 600 students.
Dr. Samuel P. Capen became

CLIFFORD C. FURNAS (Story on Furnao Yoon on Pago I)

county’s children’s hospital became Hochstetter Hall; the nurse’s

home, Townsend Hall. From 1930
to 1935, Crosby, the first Norton
Union, (now Harriman), and the
Lockwood Memorial Library were
constructed.

Dr. Capen is especially remembered for his championship of
academic freedom. At the hundredth anniversary celebration,
We hold that a
he said:
university is something over and
above a group of professional
schools. It is an instrument of
inquiry. It is a forum of criticism
and interpretation. It is an incubator of ideas. It is a nursery
of free men, and as such it is
democracy's strongest U 'vark.
leadFree men are not rea,
:

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�Thursday, April 14, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

RELATIONSHIP OF UB TO
THE STATE UNIVERSITY
Today, SUNY at Buffalo is the
largest single unit of the state
education system, with an enrollment of almost 20,000 students
in fourteen divisions. By 1970,
two campuses will be in opera-

tion, enrollment will surpass
and annual income will
exceed $80 million.

27,000,

Established as a private institution in 1846, the University of
Buffalo merged with the New
York State education system on
September 1, 1962. Shortly, following the merger, President Clifford C Furnas commented that
“As the University assumed its
new role . . there were to be no
real shifts in the basic tenets of
freedom, integrity, and public
service. What emerged,'’ Furnas
insisted, “was a new confidence,
a new hope for a future of even
greater fulfillment of the needs
of New York in higher educa.

tion.”

The decision to become a state
university rested chiefly upon the
needs for campus expansion, program enrichment, and improvement of facilities. In 1956 the
University outlined a long-range
minimum plan seeking resources
to provide better instruction, adequate facilities, improved programs, and added research funds.
This campaign to raise $9 million was undertaken and completed. Chancellor Furnas, however, still perceived that further
resources were necessary if the
university was to become, as he
proposed, “a great institution in
the national sense, contributing
to the most important aspects of
human endeavor,” Consequently,
the university looked to the state.
In 1960 the Stale University Master Plan was established which
outlined the development of four
major publicly supported, multipurpose universities emphasizing
graduate and professional education. Buffalo was suggested as a

nearly 12,000 applications in 1964
for a freshman class of 2,200.

Full time enrollment has increased from 7,350 in 1961-62 to 10,265
in 1964. Especially important, the
bulletin stresses, is the increase
in full time faculty enrollment
from 546 in 1961-62 to 945 in
1964. In addition, the portion of
research represented by sponsored programs amounted to $6.1
million in 1963-64, an increase of
nearly $1 million over the previous year. By 1963-64 the University’s operating budget was approximately $33 million. A new
women’s dormitory was erected,
renovations accomplished, and
temporary and pre-fabrieated
buildings established.

not be possible under a purely
private institution’s budget. As a
state university, therefore, both
public and private funds have

been combined to insure far more
expansive educational programs,

by encouraging mediocrity or by
necessitating excessively difficult
courses which will weed out the

bulk of the students. In addition,
the master plan of the new campus has been outlined more by

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Immediately following the merthe University of Buffalo
Foundation, Inc., was established,
retaining the name of the private
institution and symbolizing the
continuity of “private” tradition.
ger,

The purpose of the Foundation
is to secure and administer private funds, providing additional
resources for research and creative programs. Foundation Director Dr. William J. O'Connor
commented that the Foundation
“fills the needs of the University
beyond what is provided for in
the state budget.” Dr. O’Connor
emphasized that prior to the merger with the state a great portion
of the money raised for various
projects had to be spent on maintenance. salaries, and working
space. Now receiving state aid,
the university donates all monies
directly to the project itself,
while the state pays all operational costs. “Although a generous budget is received from the
state," O’Connor mentioned, “the
exceptional creativity of the faculty and students requires additional funds.” The private voice
of the Foundation results in what
O’Connor termed “a gentle balance between state and university."

The Foundation operates under
a charter established by the De-

partment of State Education,
which acts as its guideline. The
foundation, however, is “legally
separate and private.” In the fu-

possible university center.

Thc University of Buffalo Coun
cil appointed a negotiating committee on November 28, 1960 to
investigate how Buffalo might
play an integral part in this state
expansion. The year 1962 brought
the merger to a climax. On March
8 the Board of Trustees of the
State University gave official
approval to the broad outline of
affiliation. The University of Buffalo Council unanimously approved this agreement on March 9,
and on April 30 the legislation
necessary to the final merger was
signed into law by Governor
Rockefeller. The Agreement of
Merger was signed on August 27,
and filed with the Board of Regents on August 31. The University of Buffalo became the State
University of New York at Buffalo on September 1, 1962.

lure, O’C o n n o r foresees close

"These Restless Men” cites several outstanding and tangible results of the state-university merger.
Mention is made of the
reduction in tuition in fees. Aplications to the University have
mushroomed, as evidenced by

interaction between students, instructors, and professionals
through career-directing symposiums which will broaden student
perspectives and illuminate the
professional fields. These accomplishments. he i mphasized. would

ML CLAUDS C. PUFFER
Vic*-Pr*». for Busin*** Affairs

BE AN EARLY SHOPPER

Th* Board of TruttoM with Dr. Fumat as they mat an the
UB Campus last semester.
O’Connor commented that the
role of the Chancellor in raising
monies has not substantially
changed in the state university.
He continues to occupy the role
of “chief fund raiser” through his
social and professional contacts.
These resources are applied toward programs not provided for
in the state budget.

Vice President for Business Affairs Dr. Claude E. Puffer envisions SUNY at Buffalo to be
“in the future one of the best in
the nation.” Puffer noted that the
University is supported by one
of the richest states in the countyr and largely as a result of
state aid a great many advantages have been secured. Faculty
salaries have increased substantially and consequently the University has been able to attract
instructors of exceedingly good
calibre. Puffer also cited that a
greatly improved library has been
facilitated, the calibre of the
student body has risen, and a
new campus is on its way to
completion. In addition, he stressed that individual freedom and
participation has not been hampered by the merger. Puffer noted
that the only disadvantage he
could find with the state university was the increased “red tape”
and administrative complications.
This, however, he felt was "a
very small price to pay for the
many good things" resulting from
the merger. Puffer commented
that he was “very enthusiastic"
about the results of the state aid,
and remarked that the new campus will be “an educational institution giving the very best of
teaching and research' facilities
to faculty and students.”
Student Senate President Clinton Deveaux cited one of the
pressing disadvantages of the
state university to be the overwhelming problem of size. He

commented that the state university “has to meet needs prescribed by the state legislature.”
As a result, Deveaux said that the
legislature is naturally more concerned with satisfying the electorate by increasing enrollment
than with stressing academics.
This, he felt, particularly affects
students in the lower divisions

the state than by the individual
units of the University. This
master plan includes both physical layout and student enrollment.
Deveaux suggested that the state

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be allowed to influence a body
such as the Faculty-Student Association.
I

“The State University of New
York at Buffalo is literally exploding into a position as one of
America’s major public institutions of higher learning,” reads a
statement which recently appeared in “These Restless Men," the
University Foundation bulletin.

DEALS Jewelers

As the State University of New
York at Buffalo comes into a
position as “one of America’s
major public institutions of higher learning” it will have to rely
upon many factors. Among these
will be state aid, private contributions, and student action.

—SCHNEIDER—
Violinist Alexa n d e r
Schneider, a member of
the UB Budapest String
Quartet, will present a
sonata recital April 15
and 17 in the A'brightKnox Art Gallery Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. Tickets may be pur&lt; .ased for
$2. r
rd Hall tick-

�Thursday, April 14, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

The Office of the President

After August, President Clifford C. Furnas will no longer be
performing his multiple tasks as.
President of I®, but the tone
of enthusiasm and optimism he
created during his twelve-year
stay will remain as his legacy.
At times an administrator, public servant, diplomat, accountant,

'

or public relations expert, Dr.
Furnas has met the variety of
demands placed upon him. While
performing these tasks, he has
witnessed substantial changes in
the University’s structure, and in
the role of the Chancellorship,
as the school became a unit in
the State chain in 1962.

From A
Secretarys Perspective
Interview with Mrs.
Ruth East—Secretary to Dr.
Furnas)

(From an

stated, “to maintain good relation with the press, so you have
to treat them gently, while often
refusing their requests.”
Another part of this busy secretary’s day involves the many
speeches and reports which the
President is called upon to give.
With a stenographic staff of four,
Mrs. East does much of the background research work for these
speeches and reports.

How do you handle an excited
mother, who calls and asks to
speak to the President of the
University about Junior’s “F” in
Math 117?—or make up two hours
spent calling department after
department inquiring as to who
has invited a Doctor from a Pennsylvania University (who has just
called long-distance) to speak on
campus, only to finally discover
that the caller has UB confused
with the State College on Elm-

Attending t o

correspondence,

both incoming and outgoing, is
another duty of the President’s
secretary. A substantial portion

wood Avenue?

of tke lowing

correspondence

Prior to the merger with the
State system, one of the most
important concerns of the Chancellor was in the area of fundraising. Dr. Furnas points out
that, “As a private institution,
and particularly as we were, substantial fund-raising was necessary for survival. Under the State
this is no longer true, so I spend
a good deal less time on it.”

Dr. Furnas continued, however,
that the need of the university
for funds from gifts, bequests,
and other sources has not decreased. “The fund-raising work
of the University of Buffalo Foundation is quite necessary for what
we call the ‘extras of excellence.'
In other words, the State adequately provides for the basic
operating costs and it is also
providing the buildings which are
necesary, but there are many
extras which are not provided.
Among these are scholarships,
which make the difference in
whether you can do the job in
getting top-rank students, especially in the graduate and medical
schools. Additionally, the bulk of
■the money for research activities
comes from outside of the State.”
In addition, and especially since
the merger, the preparation of
the budget has taken on a greater
significance. “This is not only
because we are larger and more
complicated,” stated the President, “but also because the preparation of the budget requires a
tremendous amount of more detail than was necessary while a
private school. This is one of the
difficulties of a bureaucracy.”

MRS. RUTH BAST, Privet*

Secretary to Dr. Fume*.

If you are Mrs. Ruth East, you
take both incidents in
stride as part of a busy secretary’s daily routine. Mrs. East has
been private secretary to Dr.
Clifford C. Furnas since he became Chancellor of the University
in 1954, and prior to that time
when he was director of Cornell
Aeronautical Laboratory. Finesse
on the telephone is just one of
the many skills which are required of a top-notch secretary, and
it is especially important in the
office which is a tremendously
active and often sensitive center
of university activity.

consists of applications for teaching positions, and just recently
there were volumes of applications for the position of football
coach. These had to be sorted
and checked, and then referred
to a special committee for recommendations.
Dr. Furnas is very active on
government committees and
boards of directors, and there is
work for a secretary in these
areas also. Although it is not directly university work, it is part
of the overall job for the very
reason that is concerns the President.

Mrs. East notes that “people
feel they can come to the president of a university for everything.” This means that a good
part of her time is spent screening callers and visitors, to determine just who the President,
with his busy schedule, will be
able to see. As an example of the
type of call received, Mrs. East
mentioned that recently there
was a rash of calls from sports
writers and radio and television
announcers who wished to present to the President their opinions and recommendations regarding the selection of a new football coach. “It is important,” she

Just this small sampling of the
many duties of the President’s
secretary is a good indication of
what a busy, diversified office it
is. In the words of the lady who
has held that busy position since
1954, “It is a tremendously interesting and varied job, in what
is really the ‘hub’ of the univer-

merely

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Planning and development have
also become victims of red tape
and state administration. According to Dr, Furnas, “What this
amounts to is that we do not
have the final say, although we,
including the faculty, spend a
great deal of time and effort on
the preliminary planning.”
One task that has not undergone significant alteration, how-

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ever, is the required contact with

the alumni. Not only is the alumni important to the operation of
the university in terms of money,
but also in terms of influence in
the State Legislature and general
good will.
As a public servant, Dr. Furnas
has satisfied the need for contacts, and his own desire for
outside activities. An interested
member of the Niagara Community, he is a member of the Board
of Trustees of the Buffalo Museum of Science, and is Chairman
of the Board of Visitors of Roswell Park Memorial Institute.
Meanwhile, he participates on the
national level by sitting on the
Scientific Advisory Panel of the
House Committee on Science and
Astronautics, and the Naval Research Advisory Committee.
In addition, President Furnas
has had to serve as field general
for the huge volume of correspondence and office work which
must be taken care of. Phone calls
from officials, parents, students,
and interested public arc all
handled either by himself or his
staff. All this must be done with
time to spare for the informal
talks and formal addresses he
presents to a great variety of
groups.

While participating in all these
diverse affairs, Dr. Furnas has
developed a vision of what the
future holds for UB. “The University of 1970 will consist of an
enlarged campus and student

body and an even more distinof scholars and
scientists than at present.” This
fact will contribute to an increased emphasis and activity in research and professional education. TTie President states that,
“Our contribution's to education,
research and community service
will be greater and will find their
way into every facet of life
throughout the Niagara Frontier,
the State, and the Nation. Business and industry, government,
social service agencies, medical
and scientific facilities all will
make use of this enriched University to the benefit of the entire community and economy.”
guished body

This sweeping perspective of
influence will not be without its
side effects. Dr. Furnas sees the
students and faculty becoming
more and more qualified to do
outstanding work while in school,
and having the ability to contribute to society once they leave
the institution of higher learning.
As President of UB, Dr. Furnas
has brought the school to the
threshold of a new era of excellence. He admits that there are

still problems and difficulties
ahead; but. “We can do this if
all of us who have supported the
University of Buffalo in the past
continue to give of our time, efforts and interest—our moral and
financial support.”

He calls for a united effort to
make the world a better place
in which to live, through higher
education.

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�Thursday, April 14, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

-THE FURNAS YEARSBy WILLIAM B. WEINSTEIN
“The ultimate strength of this
country depends to a major de-

gree on the excellence of its educational pattern. Faculties and
facilities must be maintained at
a higher level of effectiveness
than ever before to meet the
need.’’

With these words, Clifford C.
Furnas said good-bye to his colleagues at the Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory, of which he was
director prior to his appointment
to the chancellorship of the University of Buffalo.
In addition, Dr. Furnas’ administrative and academic back-

ground was an extensive one at
the time of his appointment to
the chancellorship. He holds a
degree of Bachelor of Science

with honors from Purdue University, a Doctorate of Philosophy
from the University of Michigan,
and honorary degrees from Purdue, Michigan, Alfred, Thiel College and the National University
of Asuncion (Paraguay). He has
also served as Assistant Secretary
of Defense. Dr. Furnas has also
published a number of books,
some of which in co-authorship
with his wife.
Foremost in Dr. Furnas’ mind
when he came to the University
was enlarging the scope of the
institution. While his background
in chemistry and engineering led
him to be concerned with the importance of technical subjects in
the University’s curriculum, he
emphasized the need for a liberal
education.
Speaking to the 1957 graduating
class, he said that we should "correct the imbalance between ‘practical’ and ‘liberal’ programs. A
university education should embrace something more than just
professional training.”
As part of the University’s expansion, allocations to various departments have increased. In the
year 1965-66, the English Department received 8.7 times the
amount that it did in the year
1954-56. The Physics Department

has shown an increase of 6.6
times and the Psychology Department an increase of 6.0 times.
There also has been an increase
in the size of the faculty, from
1082 part-time and full-time instructors to a 1962 figure of
1938. The ratings given by the
American Association of University Professors for faculty salary
and fringe benefits are now A
and AA, the two highest categories.
The physical plant of the University from 767,160 square feet
in 1952 to 2,049,136 in 43 buildings in 1966. This figure does
not include the temporary classrooms now being erected.
As Dr. Furnas put it,' one of
the major problems confronting
the University when he took over
the leadership was the danger of
becoming “unduly provincial,’’ a
pitfall for any urban university.
The most obvious solution was
to encourage more and more nonBuffalo area students to come to
UB. In 1954-55, there were only
three residence halls with a capacity of 447 students. The end of
that year saw the completion of
another 148-student dormitory,
bringing the residence total to
558. The present capacity is 2450
and the new campus is expected
to house 10,500 students.
In 1954, Dr. Furnas said, “It

will be a sad and ironic note if
sometime in the future history

Furnat racalvat Vigilant Patriot Award.

Furnas at Dedication of Norton Hall.

Tit* Puma*' at Monwcomlng Own*.
Mt AHO

MM.

FUOWAS

records that, in the latter half of
the twentieth century, America,
which by all odds is the richest
society in all of history, went into
limbo because it could not afford
to pay for its own education;’’
And in 1957, “From the beginning, it has been the Great American Dream that every person who
has the requisite intellectual ability and is willing to make the effort should have the opportunity
to go to college.”
In order to provide an education for those who cannot afford
one, the school participates in the
New York State Higher Education Assistance Corporation, New
York State Regents Scholarship
and Incentive Award Program,
and the National Defense Loan
Program. In addition, the university works with both private
industry and the federal government in advanced research.

Dr. Furnas has also encouraged
extra-curricular activities of the
student body. The decision to
award grants-in-aid to football
players was made during his term
in office because the football program was seen as a rallying-point
for student and alumni support.
The Student Senate has undergone a great expansion over the
previous forms of student government and publications enjoy a
greater freedom at the University
than at many other schools.

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                    <text>VISTA

—

1

STATE

UnTv ER SITY

&lt;

INSERT

~O^N^W^^RK AT~BllFFALO
?

&gt;-■

CARBON
RESEARCH

il
VOLUME 16

(See Page

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1966

NO. 37

Ex-Green Beret SpecialForces Hero
To Speak Tuesday On Vietnam Crisis
Former M.Sgt. Donald Duncan,

veteran of eighteen months combat duty in Vietnam, will de-

liver a critical assessment of
United States’ foreign policy in
Vietnam Tuesday, April 19 at
8:00 p.m. in the Millard Fillmore
room.

Mr. Duncan has served for six
in the Special Forces
(Green Berets). He is also military editor of Ramparts, a Roman Catholic magazine and is
traveling across the country
under its auspices according to
Dr. Sidney Wilhelm, who is in
charge of Mr. Duncan’s publicity
at UB.
In an interview with The New
York Times, Mr. Duncan said,
“I had to accept the fact that
Communist or not, the vast majority of the people were proyears

Vietcong and anti-Saigon.”
He charged in “Ramparts” that
Special Forces troops were urged to arrange for the killing of

Vietcong by South Vietnamese
troops, and were taught NKVD
(Soviet security police) torture

methods to extract information
from the enemy in a course entitled “Counter-measures to Hostile Interrogation.” He also asserted that although the United
States was speaking out against
Communist infiltrators in South
Vietnam, the Special Forces had
sent infiltrators into Laos and
North Vietnam.
Mr. Duncan noted that “emphasis was placed on the fact
that guerrillas can’t take prisoners. We were continuously told,
you don’t have to kill them yourself—let your indigenous counterpart do that.” He mentioned
witnessing the “practice of turning prisoners over .to the Army
of the Republic of Vietnam for
‘interrogation’ and the atrocities
which ensued.
Mr. Duncan feels that the increased growth of the Vietcong

NSA Latin American
Conference April 15-17
The New York State Region of
the National Student Association
will sponsor a conference on
Latin-American affairs April 1517. Delegates from 15 regional
schools will attend.
Regional Chairman Carl Levine
announced “the purpose of the
conference is to provide an opportunity for students to be exposed to discussions concerning
foreign policy determination as
well as with persons . . . who are
knowledgeable in Latin-American
affairs.”
The keynote address will be
delivered by Mr. Fred Berger,
Latin-American assistant for the
Washington NSA, Friday evening,
April 15. Mr. Levine reported that
Mr. Berger was recently expelled
from a Democratic Students Congress in Spain by Generalissimo
Franco.
UB history professor G. H.
Young, and political science professor Gary Hoskin, will participate in a panel discussion Saturday at 10 a.m. A third member of the panel has not yet
been chosen.

Latin-American

students

at-

tending UB will participate in
another panel discussion Saturday at 1:30 followed by consultation with regional school delegates.

Mr. Lawrence Smith, UB For-

eign Student Advisor and mem-

A table will be set up
Monday and Tuesday in
Norton Lobby to solicit
free literature and information on opportunities
for study, work and
travel in Israel. Anyone
who has been to Israel
and wishes to help at the
table call 831-3987 or
831-3887.
The Spanish Club will

meet Friday, April 15, in

233 Norton for music
and songs in Spanish and
election of officers.

“is not only impossible without
popular support, it actually requires a mandate," and noted
that the Vietcong have had this
popular support.”
Continuing, he stated that
Special Forces were always told
that the majority of the people
were opposed to the Vietcong
and that the people aided the
Vietcong only through fear yet
at the same time the Special
Forces were taught that “reliable support can be gained only
through friendship and trust.”

Mr. Duncan has been awarded
the South Vietnamese Silver Star
and other medals. He has rejected a field commission to the
rank of captain as a repudiation
of this administration’s policy in
Vietnam, according to Dr. Wilhelm.

The Department of Defense
has issued the following statement: “Apparently Mr. Duncan
has written an article expressing
his views on his military service.
We have no comment.”
Mr. Duncan’s speech is sponsored by the Students For A
Democratic Society and the Council For Citizens Responsible For
Foreign Affairs. There will be
a minimum donation of fifty
cents for students.

M. Sgt. Donald Duncan, a Haro in tha Army'i Special Forces
Corp. has said of Viet Nam "the whole thing was a Hal" Duncan,
Military Editor of the Catholic Magazine, RAMPARTS is on a cross
country speaking tour.

IRC Election Debate Extracts
Candidates Ideas for New Gov't
By TERRY SEAL
Inter-Residence Council
(IRC) held an election debate last
Monday. ’The six candidates for
the four IRC offices are: President, Joel Feinmen and Larry
Pivnick; vice president, Alan
Fried; treasurer, Alan Sturtz, and
secretary, Sharon Shulman and

The

Judy Snyder.
In his opening statement, presidential candidate Larry Pivnick
expressed plans to work for a

CARL LEVINE
NSA Regional Director

ber of the NSA Advisory Board,
will speak at a banquet Saturday at 5:30 p.m.
An informal discussion will
be held in the Haas Lounge from
8-11 a.m. Also planned is a discussion by Mr. Smith on programming instruction.
All students are invited to attend all discussions.

student’s voice in the selection of
residence hall food. He also mentioned plans for an Allenhurst
snack bar, a seconds table for
food on the weekends, and a Sunday dinner instead of a Sunday
breakfast.
Progress in housing, elimination of the women’s curfew, more
co-ed hours in the dorms, increased inter-dorm co-operation
and commuter-resident co-operation are also part of his platform.

Presidential candidate
Joel
Feinman proposed the perpetua-

tion of the IRC food policy as it
is now follwed by the food service. He also urged more liberal
curfews for women residents, a
fair and adequate judicial system for residence halls, visiting
rights for men and women students in the dorms, especially on
the new campus, and different,
select personalities to be invited
by the residence hall students to
live on their dorm floors.
The unopposed candidate for
the vice presidency, Alan Fried,
said he would like to see a coordinated IRC committee and
greater student turnout at university affairs.
In
his opening statement,
treasurer candidate Alan Sturtz,

running unoposed, expressed a
desire for more and better stu-

dent activities.
Sharon Shulman, a candidate
for IRC secretary, called for more
student involvement and voice in
student housing, women’s curfews and food service. She also
proposed the establishment of a

program through which well
known people would speak to
dormitory and commuting students in the dorms, and expansion
of the university ticket services
to include a greater variety of
off-campus events and the residence hall paper, the Prism.
Judy Snyder, a candidate for
secretary, stressed a need for
student involvement and for improved Student Senate-Inter-Residence Council relations. She also
mentioned a need to liberalize
the women's curfew regulations.
One question posed to the candidates concerned the problems
of the projected 10,000 residence
students on the new Amherst
campus. Mr. Sturtz responded
that he plans more committees
and an IRC judiciary.
Mr. Feinman suggested small
dormitories and fewer house
councils.
The debate will be rebroadcast over WBFO Wednesday,
April 13 ,at 11:30 p.m., AM direct
to the dorms only.

Rioting Accepted Form of Behavior
Sociologist Tilley
Ends History Coni.
“Participation by riot became
the most effective and popular
form of participation in the 18th
Century,” observed
sociologist
Charles Tilley of the University
of Toronto at the closing session
of the History Department's conference on “The Moral Economy
of the Poor in 18th Century

England.”

The session consisted of comment elicted by a paper presented earlier by Dr. Edward
Thompson. Rather than the usual explanations of hunger and
the rising cost of food, Dr.
Thompson sought the causes of
the 10th Century English food

riots in the dissonance aroused
in the population by the change
over from a consumer-economy
based on "just price’ ’and a
market economy where prices
are set by seller for maximum

profit.

The rioters sought to draw
upon customary notions of right,
Dr. Thompson continued. The
patterns of thought from the
Tudor period carried over well
into the 18th Century.
Dr. Tilley dealt mainly with
French riots of the same period.
Rather than being chaotic and
aimless, he commented, the riots
had an internal structure and a
political center. By such demonstrations the population sought
to keep grain in the community
and its price at a reasonable

level. He sees a “rationality in
the disorder” and considered the
riots as "having a communal economy.”
There is a “kind of geography
to hunger in France,” Tilley continued, and rather than being
a peasant phenomenon, as Dr.
Thompson projected for England,
these riots were caused by the
“semi-urban population of the
chies”
The second speaker, Richard
B. Morris, sought to confine his
remarks to the situation in America and a discussion of why the
riots took a different turn in
the colonies.
There was no hunger in America, he observed. New York and

Pennsylvania were, in fact, grain
exporting areas. Food riots were
very exceptional and demonstrations might be attributed to a
sense of “moral'outrage on the
part of the poor.”

Dr. Morris noted a strong pattern of rural rioting. The Plank
Cutting Riots were pointed to as
an example

of manifest lower
class discontent. Those settling
in urban areas were most susseptible to riot due to the adverse living conditions, he continued.
"After 1764," Dr. Morris felt,
“it was hard to separate economic and political riots.” The
entry of the upper class into the
demonstrations was a prelude to
the American Revolution.

�Wednesday, April 13, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Cram Sheet
For Draft

A Case In Point:

P. Salstrom—Conscientious Objector
By ROGER FRIEDLAND
a non-coopera disaffiliate,
He has spent
life in jail

Paul Salstrom is

ator. an

absolutist,

an anti-cpnscriptor.

33 months of his
for , a belief, a commitment to
his conscience.

At the age of 20, Salstrom refused to carry his draft card,
sending it back to his local board
In consequence, he received an
order to report for induction.

Salstrom refused to comply on
the grounds that “any affiliation
with the system is an affiliation
with militarism."
He was then arrested and sentenced by a Federal District Court
to a three year sentence in prison. After fasting for the first
15 days of his sentence in prison,
he was transferred to the Medical
Center for Federal Prisoners in
Springfield, Mo.
Salstrom got a “mandatory release” after two years of good
conduct.
However, he was re-arrested
and sentenced to an additional
nine months in the Danbury Correctional Institution after violating the terms of his release by
organizing an anti-draft caravan.
After his release in June, 1965,
he was reclassified 4-F for his
conviction on felony charges.
Paul Salstrom is a case in point.
He is an absolutist, whose commitment to conscience supersedes
all else, even his regard for
personal safety.
He believes that one’s consideration of the draft must be set
in “the context of beliefs about
right and wrong . . . for I have
experienced morality as one of
the truly precious aspects of life.
“But morals cease to be morals
and beliefs to be beliefs to the
extent that they are set to stew
in a pot of random concerns about
one's personal comfort or the
fate of one's skin.”
The non cooperalor overtly
breaks the law He is a radical
pacifist who refuses any form
of conscription by the government in an effort symbolically to
disaffiliate himself from the United States government.
The statutory maximum penalty of five years imprisonment
and/or $10,000 fine is relatively
mild compared to past U.S. draft
policies.
During World War I. non-coop-

The official

Quakers for

student newspaper

worried about passing
can usually find previous tests or former students to
tutor them through the mysteries
of English Lit or History II-A.
Now they can apply the same
methods to the draft deferment
test, coming up in May.
Students

an exam

whom the ambulance

service was created in France.
Referring to the possibility of
a C.O. draft status, Salstrom said,
'Tve infinitely preferred even a
comparatively long period in prison to the legal choice, of applying to a draft board or its supervisors for permission not to
engage in the massacre of my
fellow human beings.”

Barron’s, a company dealing in

course outlines and sample test
questions, has just issued “How
to Prepare for the Student Draft

Deferment Test” with “all the
facts you need to help you score
higher.” Based on the previous
Korean War tests and standard
aptitude tests, the “cram sheet”
offers complete verbal and mathematical exercises as well as

Expressing much dissatisfaction with the peace movement,
Salstrom believes that the current
pacifist tactics will not be effective until they go beyond token
sacrifices exemplified by sit-ins
and marches.

sample tests.

“If the coalition peace movement does not go beyond the
street or beyond a few easy years
beyond the confines,
in jail
that is, of liberal consensus-oriented civil libertarianism just
barely defcnsibly labeled ‘protest,’
the movement will not become
credible and not become significant,” Salstrom said.

New York University is offering a tutoring program to help
liberal arts majors prepare for
the algebra and trigonometry
questions. Clifford Tisser, Technology Council Vice President, is
basing the program on previous
test questions released by the

—

New York Journal American.

During his stay in prison, Salstrom said that he had no difficulty making friends. “The average
convict seems to me as honest
and straightforward as the aver-

age unconfined
said.

cjCetterA

American,” he

Beyond friendship, “There arc
plenty of illegal excitements
available to individuals in prison
so inclined, ranging from delivery of contraband cigarettes (cigarette packs serve universally as
money behind bars) and the smuggling of contraband papers and
mistreatment reports to outside
contacts, to the harboring of jack

breweries, homosexual rendezvous
and marijuana stashes to name
five of the many I personally
adopted in the cause of freedom,” he commented.
Salstrom reflected that he was
pleased with his “social results
behind bars."
"The fasting period automatically resulted in limitless respectful curiosity from other inmates,
about nonviolence and the anti
war position . .
he said.
He noted that there were college-educated convicts in prison,
so that “informed and civilized
conversation isn’t sacrificed by

SPECTRUM

THE

Published

erators were either executed or
sentenced to life imprisonment.
The sole exception was for the

of the State University of New York at Buffalo
Hall. University Campus, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.

JEREMY

Manager

Business

TO THE EDITOR

This is in reply to the April
8th column by J, Callan “The
Right”:

There are few subjects on
which bourgeous society displays
greater hypoeracy than on that
of abortion. Abortions are condemned and made illegal and
judged immoral on basis of the
Catholic argument that endows
the fetus with a soul that won’t
be allowed entrance to heaven
unless born and baptised. Yet
the church consents to allowing
adults to be killed in war while

sclf-righteously upholding a humanitarian position toward the
unborn fetus. It seems odd, as
Simone Dc Beauvoir says in The
Second Sex, that men with the
most scrupulous respect for embryonic life are also those who
arc most eagerly officious when
it comes to condemning adults to
death in war.”
It must also be noted that our
society, so concerned to defend
the rights of the embryo, shows
so little concern in the children
once they are born. Abortionists

RAYMOND D

—

Mike

Sharcot

Castro.

Staff—Joanne

STEVE SCHUELEIN
Steve Farbman. Bob Frey.

Layout Editor
Bouchier, Stephanie

Scott

Forman.

SHARON HONIG

Parker.

Steve Silverman

Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer.
Staff—Carol Becker. Estelle Fok. Jocelyn
Claire Shottenfeld. Susan Zuckerberg
i
RON HOLTZ
Advertising Manager
Staff—Tarry Angelo. Audrey Cash. Pat Rosenfeld. Steve Silverman, Joseph
Mancini
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Photography Editor

Staff —Don Blank. Peter Bonneau. Joseph Feyes. Carol Goodson. Alan Gruber.
Marc Levine. Ivan Makuch. Michael Solun. Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman,
Robert Wynne
Circulation

Manager

DIANE LEWIS

Faculty Advisor

IRENE WILLET

Financial Advisor

EDITORIAL

POLICY IS

FIRST

J
PWCSS

DALLAS GARBER

DETERMINED

BY

THE EDITOR-IN

CHIEF

CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class Postage

Subscription
15.000

S3 00

Paid at
per

and most often corrupt. That is
not to mention the brutality and
sometimes death that may come
to a child unfortunate enough to
be born to a parent who awaits
its arrival in hatred. Abortionists
have been known to have served
several years in prison while parents convicted of child beating
to serve merely a few months, I
wonder, Mr. Callan, if your estimation of morality does not need
a thorough overhaul.
Only an individual of the middle class, like yourself, could so
easily condemn abortion. After
all what is the little extra expense
of an added child to someone of
America’s middle class. But to
those in poverty, another pregnancy cuts off a mother’s earning
power, and the child becomes an
added economic burden. An abortion could not only aid the parent
to feed the children she already
has, but also could keep her in
an earning capacity, And what,
Mr, Callan, could be more im-

moral than a bad illegal abortion
where the innocent victim of social pressures lies mutilated or

dies? (not to mention the fear
and shame she is forced to induce because of the hypocracy
and double standards of our sex
laws). She is left at the mercy
of an abortionist who may or may
not be a butcher and who has
robbed her of up to $2000 dollars
for an operation which shouldn’t
exceed $75. There would be no
need for this if such operations
were legalized for abortions are
simple operations when done in
a modern day hospital.

The fact is, that whether or not
people, like yourself, condemn
abortions or not, they still go on
and because of the illegality imposed upon them by institutions
such as the church and ignorant
individuals like yourself, more
and more girls lie chopped up in
a sewer.
Two lives lost instead
of one.
“The law forbidding abortion
is immoral because it is necessarily bound to be violated every—

day and every

hour.”
Janet Shapiro

Again And Again And Etc.

Temps Scored
TO THE EDITOR

VOLPE

Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Staff—Bonnie Bartow. Ron Ellsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons. Barbara Loeb.
Audrey Logel. Bob Martin. Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack. William Weinstein.

Staff
J. B

are prosecuted by law but institutions housing the unwanted
child are, in most eases, under
poor management, ill-financed,

TAYLOR

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff—Loretta Angelme. Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen Green,
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab, Dan Schroeder. Sharon Shulman.
Eileen Teitler. Nancy Toder. Patti Wartiey, Judy Weisberg

Sports Editor
Mike Dolan.

the Editor

Callan Scored On Abortion, Again

Publication Office at Norton
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May, except for exam periods. Thanksgiving. Christmas, and spring vacations.
Editor-in-Chief

to

Buffalo. N. Y.
circulation

year,

Represented
advertising
by
for national
National Advertising Service, Inc . 420 Madi
.
son Ave New YorK N. Y,

Contrary to previous speculation, the curious structures being
erected at various and sundry loci
on campus are neither the result
of ambitious engineering majors'
labor with the Jolly Green Giant's
erector set, nor red lead chapels
in a God-is-Alive movement (the
name "Bethlehem" notwithstanding), nor idols erected to Chauncey the Cruddy Campus Crawler
Crane, recently deified in ceremonies all over the muddy campus.

Rather, these structures will be
used for classroom and office
space, as similar cowbarns presently are at SUNYAB Mudaeres
East. A stroke of genius has been
added by the apparent colorcoding of the new buildings.
Whereas it is usually no problem
(because of the distinctive architecture) to learn a name for a
new building, in this case where
the architectural style is Modern
Technocrat Conformist, it is manifestly impossibly. Hence buildings will be named after the color

of their exterior decor, a very
pragmatic consideration. Aesthetically, the only drawback is the
embarrassment a student will suffer when he confides to a friend
that he has a class in 114 Mustard
Hall.

To further facilitate logistic
efficiency, I suggest to the Administration that in addition to
color-coding the buildings, appropriately colored buildings be asst gncd to each department.
Hence; royal heliotrope for Administration, jaundice yellow for
the Med School, ‘nut'-brown for

campus the ivory-tower white pa-

goda of the Philosophy Department.
I think just about every division and school in the university
would benefit from this plan, except perhaps MFC (because, after
all, who can tell the color of an
unlighted building at night?)
—Diogenes L. Schriber

Spectrum
U nappreciated
TO THE EDITOR:

the Rockefeller Creative Associates, shocking pink for the Spring
“Arts” Festival Committee, scotch
plaid for the FSA.

Three cheers and a hearty
bellylaugh for your unsuccessful
attempt, nevertheless, AN attempt to upgrade the standard

addition, the geographic
placement of buildings could be
made helpful to the student
Thus Sociology, in its Chinesered barn, would be on the eastern
fringe; ROTC, in its Air Force
blue barn, on the right; and the
neutral gray barn of Political
Science in the middle. And of
course in the magnetic center of

Namely, your April Fool’s “joke”
issue was tantamount to the trash
that you print weekly tor weakly).
But don't despair, Spectrum staff,
for your monumental April Fool’s
issue will serve the same utili-

In

of

your

mundane

newspaper.

tarian purpose of all your past
issues: lining garbage cans, wrapping fish and swatting flies.
Frank Serrio

�Wednesday, April 13, 1966

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Is
Stateless Person'

SDS Speaker
I have been declared a ‘stateless person’ by the Immigration
Department and must deport myself under threat of imprisonment. This extremely cruel punishment has often been perpetuated on aliens, but I am the
first native American to suffer
this injustice." proclaimed Mr.
Joseph Johnson in a lecture sponsored by the Students for a Dcm
ocratic Society last Monday.
“

■

Mr. Johnson reported that in
1964 he was informed by the
Immigration Nationalization Service that his citizenship was in
doubt because of a violation of
the McCarran Act (Immigrafional
Naturalization Act), which forbids an American citizen to participate directly in the politics of
&amp;

The little known Carbon Research Center is located behind the
Nuclear Research Center in the south end of the campus.

Carbon Research Center;
Unique University Asset
By

CARUE ORESKOVICH

Buried at the far side of the
overshadowed by the
Maintenance Department and the
Nuclear Research Center lies a
square, ungarnered brick building
hearlded by a small plaque declaring that this is the “Carbon
Research Center.”
campus,

This innocuous laboratory is
unique in that it is the only university lab in America that is
specifically designed for research
on carbon. It has been the host
of many distinguished professors
who have come to work in this

research center. At present there
are professors from Japan, Taiwan, France and Germany in postgraduate work.
The research has formerly been
supported by the Navy, Air Force
and the National Science Founda-

tions with the aid of many business and industrial firms. The
Air Force has since discontinued
support. The heavy military support is due to many applications
which carbon compounds have in
rockets and nuclear development.
The tests conducted at this center consist of compiling data on
the qualities and properties of
the products formed. The lab
serves as a ‘data’ center in supplying information to be used by
industry and the government.
Carbon, commonly known as
"the building block of life” has
to its credit many valuable qualities. One of these is that it does
not melt and thus can withstand
high temperatures.
The immediate applicability of
this trait in the building of rockets is readily seen. Carbon can
be combined in many different
ways and the patricular composition used, affects its properties.
Testing the resulting compound
is the main purpose of the lab.
The Center contains the equipment which enables the preparalion of the different combinations.
The material is the electrically
heated, better terms would be
jolted’ or ‘shocked’, up to 3500
degrees centigrade, a temperature
for above ‘white’ heat! The
strength, durability and other
factors of the non-metal are then
tested to gain important informa-

tion on the compound. Another
of the four projects in progress
is the testing of the carbon at
very low temperatures with the
use of Nitrogen, liquid Hydorgen and Helium.
This laboratory, employing up
to 20 people is under the direction of Dr. Stanislaw Mrozowski.
Dr. Mrozowski received his doctorate at the University of Warsaw, Poland and TUniversite de
Bordeaux, France and among
many other credits he has been
head of the Research and Development Division of the Great
Lakes Carbon Corporation.

Dr. Mrozowski is Editor in
Chief of “International Carbon"
a journal which has a worldwide
scope, importance and contributions.

a foreign country.

“I moved to Canada in 1953
to escape the Korean War, the

McCarthy ‘Witchhunt.’ and racial
discrimination,” he explained. In
1958. Mr, Johnson left Canada
to serve two years in Springfield
Penitentiary "for failure to notify the Draft Board an address
change."

“In Canada I was as politically
active as a human being can get.
I did not vote, but as a Socialist
1 was directly involved in the
selection of candidates and the
formation of a labor party.”
Provided with a lawyer by the
Emergency Civil Liberties Committee,

Mr. Johnson said that he

plans to appeal his case to the
highest level of the Immigration
Department and, if necessary, before the' Supreme Court.

When asked why the Immigration Department decided to prosecute him, Mr. Johnson said he

30-Hour Tricycle Marathon
Slated By Alpha Phi Omega
The brothers and pledges of
Alpha Phi Omega Fraternity arc
planning a 30-hour tricycle marathon, TRIKES FOR TIKES, Tuesday and Wednesday, April 19 and
20. Proceeds of the marathon will
benefit the Easter Seal Foundation, which sponsors research for
crippling diseases. The “Trike-athon” will begin at Lafayette
Square in downtown Buffalo Tuesday at 10 a.m„ proceeding slowly
down Main St. and arriving at
the UB campus Tuesday evening.
The cycling will continue throughout Tuesday night at the fountain

outside Norton Union, ending
there Wednesday afternoon. Donations will be accepted during
the entire marathon.

Dr. Naim Kattan, noted
ed editor and critic in
Montreal, will speak in
French on “The Quiet
Cultural a n d Literary
Revolution in French
C a n a d a” April 14 at
8 :30 p.m. in 335 Norton.

sees no reason for the action
against him when Grace Kelly
is ruling over a nation. Cardinal
Cusring is voting at the Vatican,
and the United States advisors
arc acting in Viet Nam.

CJtSoaJ
Dr. George G. Iggers of the
history department will speak to
the German Club on April 13 at

7:30 p.m. in Norton 334.
The first meeting of Group
Leaders for Freshman Orientation Kail 1966 will be held Thursday. April 14 at 3 p.m. in Norton

240-242.

Attendance

is manda-

tory.

There will be a business meeting of the Anthropology Club at
7:30 April 13 in the new archaeology lab, 3230 Main Street.
The Mathematics Club will
present Dr. Wallace speaking on
"Lie Algebras" on Wednesday.
April 13 at 7:30 p.m. Election of
officers will also take place.

Dr. Saltarelli Receives
Higby Foundation Grant
Dr. Cora G. Saltarelli, assistant
professor of bioengineering in
the Division of Interdisciplinary
Studies and Research of the
School of Engineering, has been
awarded a $3,000 grant from the
Samuel Higby Camp Foundation.
The award was made to Dr.
Saltarelli in her studies of "Genetics of Pathcnogenic Yeasts.” She
had previously received a grant
from the Graduate School for
the project.

Since 1949, Dr. Mrozowski has
worked on the Doctorate Degree
which he initated and has trained
many graduates from around the
world in the use of carbon.

Dr. Mrozowski, who has just
returned from a trip to New
Jersey stands a lanky 6 feet in
height. A bespectacled, gaunt
man, 65 years of age, he shows
a sense of humor unusual for
a man of his profession. Speaking with a slight accent he says,
“We (professors) are simple people. Nothing but Physics is in
our mind.” And justifies his long
term by saying, “The trouble
with professors is that they do
not know anything else to do.”
Dr. Mrozokski considers the research exciting and he enjoys
the ‘world’ of experimentation.
He notes that in the last short
while they have had two explosions which have burned equipment, Dr. Mrozowski indicates his
drive when he states, “We are
so devoted to Physics that we
do not have much time to think
of other things.”
Last year Dr. Mrozowski taught
at the Japanese Universities at
Kayo and Nagora where he also
assisted in research. In two
months he is going to be lectured in Germany. At 65 Dr.
Mrozowski continues to be energetic in his research and teaching.

How to look good on any golf course; play it bold with Arrow's Mr. Golf, the Decton wash
and wear knit that stays fresh and crisp to the eighteenth and beyond. Stays tucked-in.
j
too. An extra-long back tail keeps down while you swing. Many
jp Df) fJ
(/ff*
standout colors, $5. Pick out a few at your Arrow retailers

"Vi/f/l

�Before the Computer
Love l/Vas for Sports
(ACP)-Little Johnny sat

on

his grandfather’s lap and said,
“Tell me about the old days
again, Grandpa. You know, before the computers.”
Grandpa smiled and looked
dreamily through his spectacles.
“Ah, yes, those were the days,”
he mused. "Of course conditions
were terrible. People had to
think for themselves and even

make decisions. But you know,
there was something about those
times.”

CLASSIFIED
LOST AND FOUND
MAN'S dark leather wallet; im
portant papers; please return

to

lost and

at Norton

found

Union.

WANTED
TWO PEOPLE to sublet 3Vfe-room
10-minute walk from
apt.,
campus: occupancy June 1-Sept.
1; $80 month. Call Steve or Gene,
831 3552.

ROCK AND ROLL drummer, over
18, steady employment available through summer. BU 3-8517
MUST LOCATE young man who
turned man car around after

Wednesday, March 30.
on Parkridge, about 1:55 p.m.
Call 832-2095.

accident

FEMALE ROOMMATES, 2 for
summer, 1 for fall. $32 each
plus utilities. Close to campus.
Call 832 4698 after 6.
TRAVEL
UB JET FLIGHT to France leav
inR June 27, returning Sept. 5.
Round-trip NYC-Paris, $340. Faculty,
students, employees of

“Tell me about dating again,
Grandpa. I want to hear about
the girls.”

“Well, there was one time I
remember. It must have been
back in ’65, Yeah, it was ’65 all
right, cause I remember the
computers came in ’66.
“I was walking across the old
campus one day and I. saw this
girl, just standing there looking
real cute. So, being a gay blade
in them days, 1 just sort of sauntered up to her and struck up a
conversation. And I got a date
with her that very night.”
“Wow, Grandpa! You must be
the bravest man in the whole
world. You didn’t even know if
you two were compatible, did
you?”

“Nope. Sure didn’t. Funny
though, it didn’t seem to matter
a whole lot at the time.”

“But weren’t you scared? I
mean, you didn’t even know if
you both felt the same way about
abortion.”

“Well, I guess I was a little
nervous, all right. Cause I didn’t
even know it she was powerful,
intelligent, giving or aesthetic.”
“Yeah, and what about sexual
involvement? She might have
gone back and told the whole
dorm so far as you know.”
“Well, that was the chance we
had to take back then,”
“Boy, I’ll bet it was a real
drag, not knowing a thing about
her, Grandpa. What ever hap
pened to the old girl, anyway?”

“She’s out in the kitchen,
I been married to that old
gal for 56 years. Damn, I wish
we were compatible.”
sonny.

SUNYAB eligible. Contact Stanford I.eff soon! 834-1869.
FOR

RENT

TWO-BEDROOM furnished apt.
near campus, to sublet for sum
mer. Call 833-6416 after 6 p.m.

—VOLUNTEERS—
Volunteers are needed
to take the Student Attitudes Test at the Senate
Office. 205 Norton.

LUXURY, furnished, modern apt.

for summer. Electric kitchen,
short walk; reasonable rent. Call
837 9792.
FOR SALE

1965 BENELLI 125cc two cycle,
under 1000 miles; $375. Call
TF 29228 after 6:30 p.m.

ANNOUNCING

May 20 Deadline for Peace Corps
The Peace Corps announced
that May 20 is the deadline to
enroll in 11 Peace Corps training
courses for college juniors to be
held this summer at U.S. universities.
Peace Corps officials advised
that students enroll immediately
because of the time required to
process applications.
The 10 courses starting in June
and the other in July are design-

ed to enable future volunteers
to integrate Peace Corps training
with their senior year of college.
Juniors qualified to enter the
Advance Training Program will
be prepared for assignment in

PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION
and HOSPITAL
PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION

The State University of New
York at Buffalo Music Department today announced that Alexander Schneider, violinist, and
Peter Serkin, pianist, will present
2 Sonata Recitals on Wednesday,
April 13th, and on Friday, April
15th, at the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery at 8:30 p.m. These recitals are to replace concerts
originally scheduled by the Budapest Quartet. The recital on Wednesday, April 13th, will include
four works by Franz Schubert.
The April 15th recital is entitled The Great G Major Sonatas and include works by Bach,
Mozart, Brahms, and Beethoven.
■

Alexander Schneider, a member of the Budapest Quartet, is
well known to Buffalo audiences
for his performances here. He
will also be involved April 11

sitions of responsibility and
leadership in management,
marketing, selling and research in pharmaceutical, cosmetic and related industries
in the wholesaling and retailing of the drug trade; in
preparation for teaching of
pharmacy administration; and
in the administration of the

$7
.

hospital pharmacy.

Admission for matriculated

«"***»

multiply
'

For Regular Pity
Apprti Stringing Cnnt

Tnnnlt
Badminton

(9
,,

,,

.

A

from

summer employment. Trainees
may borrow up to $600 at low

through 14th as a faculty member of the String Players’ Institute at the University and will
conduct the String orchestra of
the Institute on Thursday at 4:30
p.m. in the Baird Recital Hall.
Peter Serkin, son of the famed
pianist Rudolph Serkin, will accompany Alexander Schneider.
Mr. Serkin recently performed
with great success at Carnegie
Hall in New York City as soloist
with the Cleveland Orchestra
and records for R.C.A. Victor.

Tickets are available at the
Baird Hall Box Office. Prices are
$2.50 general admission, $1.50
faculty and staff, and $.50 students. Phone reservations will
not be accepted, but mail orders
will be ffilled if sent with a
check and self-addressed enve-

lope. On the night of the per-

formance, tickets will be available at the Albright-Knox Gallery.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

Putin eri' Preii, ~3n
sAltyoll

S)ntillt

Printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at

Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

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graduate students is limited
to those who possess BS.
in Pharmacy degrees.

iv

0?

SESSIONS BEGIN
FEBRUARY AND SEPTEMBER
Course is designed to prepare
graduate pharmacists for po-

....

have otherwise earned

.interest rates to pay expenses
during their final year in school.
ATP was begun in 1964 as a
solution to the increasingly difficulty in preparing volunteers
for certain assignments. Some
volunteers, for example, must
learn two languages to handle
their work effectively. ATP gives
the Peace Corps 15 months to
prepare the volunteer instead of
the normal three.
Further information may the
obtained from the Peace Corps
liaison office on campus or by
writing Room 722, Division of
Public Affairs, Peace Corps,
Washington, D.C. 20525.

leading to

in

tpprw Stringing Colt
Tannlg

The assignments
14 countries.
cover community and agricultural development, secondary education and teaching English in
French-speajting West Africa.
In their final year of college,
the trainees’ courses of study
may be tailored to fit their Peace
Corp training. The ATP enrollees
will complete their training in
special field program the summer of 1967.
A Peace Corps loan fund for
ATP enrollees helps cover the
loss of income trainees might

Schneider and Serkin Recital;
Violin and Piano Are Featured

GRADUATE PROGRAMS

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SPECTRUM

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�VISTA Seeks Volunteers to Fight Compassionate War
“An organization that fights poverty with deeds, not
dole, needs tough and compassionate people,” according to Glenn Ferguson, director of Volunteers in Service
to America.
“When our VISTA Volunteers land in a city slum or
an Appalachian hollow, they immediately discover problems that weren’t covered in the sociology textbooks.
They’re grim problems, for poverty is a grim business,
and the Volunteers have to be strong enough to act, to
endure, and smart enough to understand.”
In describing the organization he heads, Ferguson
said: “VISTA doesn’t offer its Volunteers much money.
It doesn’t offer the glamor of foreign travel. I believe it’s
probably the most spartan and most dedicated arm of

the entire war on poverty. It offers the singular chance
for a person to find out if he has enough courage to
spend a year of his life in the often thankless task of
helping others.”
VISTA, he said, “is not a job for the squeamish or
the theoreticians. It isn’t easy to find volunteers. We've
got to count on a special kind of people. People who
care. People who mean what they say.
“The squeamish can’t take the squalor and the heartbreak and the theoreticians find their pet theories shot
down five minutes after they confront a 17-year old
dropout who thinks that a 47-cent bottle of wine and a
50-cent reefer are the only way to start the day.”

A Volunteer's principal equipment. Ferguson said, “is
determination, compassion and perseverence. It takes
all three.”
He said that VISTA “is calling the bluffs of people
who claim to be concerned. Their year in VISTA will
take them deep into the lives of others. I can think of
nothing more fascinating than that.”
The college-trained, he said, “have the background
and the knowledge to make excellent Volunteers. If they
have the necessary emotional and mental stamina, they
move high up on our list of prospects.
“So far, college campuses have proved to be a most
productive source of goo4 Volunteers," he said.

Jtsm VOICE

the

A publication of Volunteers In Service To America

VISTAs College-Trained
Acceptance Rate Hits 75%
Seventy-five percent of all college trained persons who apply to
spend a year of their lives in service to America as VISTA Volunaccepted, Glenn Fergu-

leers are

son, director of VISTA, has an-

nounced.
The high rate of acceptance of
college students and graduates by
VISTA is attributed by Fergu-

VISTA Tops Peace Corps
Growth, Shriver States
After 11 months of operation,
VISTA has done “belter than the
Peace Corps at a comparable
stage of development,” Sargent
Shriver, the man who until recently ran the Peace Corps, told
a Washington press conference.

WILEASE REIDS, 22, was so wall racaivad by tha Pima-Maricepa
Indians whom she trained among that the Tribal Council asked
her to stay with them for the rest of her year of service. She is
a graduate of Maryland State College.

AidsIndians
VISTA
In War Against Want
The 1960’s could go down as
the decade in which the American Indian fought his last battle
against his oldest foe —poverty
and won.
But the odds still weigh heavily
against the reservation-bound Indian. He suffers from disease.
malnutrition, polluted wafer, high
infant mortality, and a life ex—

pectancy of 42 years.
The average Indian per family
income is $1,500 a year—less
than a quarter of the national average. Unemployment is around
40 percent —eight times the national average,
Nine out of 10 of the nation’s
385,000 reservation Indians live
(Continued on Page 3)

At the 11-month mark, VISTA
had 1,477 Volunteers in the field
or in training in 39 states and
Washington, D.C. That figure has
now increased to more than
2,000 Volunteers.
During a comparable period,
Shriver said, the Peace Corps had
820 Volunteers, either on overseas assignment or in training.
According to Shriver, VISTA
plans to have 3,500 Volunteers in

the field by June of this year.
"The Volunteers are the heart
of the war on poverty,” he said.
“In community after community
they have shown that deprived
and isolated people are willing
and able to make a new, constructive effort with encouragement and skilled assistance.”

grown up in poverty," he said,
"have a special understanding to
contribute.”
Shriver said. "The War on
Poverty takes money. But money
alone cannot win the war. Dedicated, skilled people are needed
to bridge the gulf between the
poor and the rest of America
and to start the process of regeneration in America."

the “initiative, commitand adaptability of college
students." These characteristics,
considered highly important for
the Volunteers, are “continually
demonstrated by young college
volunteers during training," he
said.
"In fact." Ferguson
said,
"more than three-fourths of all
VISTA Volunteers now serving
in the nation’s poverty areas are
between 20 and 24. Of these, approximately half have completed
from one to three years of college and another 16 percent are
son

to

ment,

recent graduates."
Sargent Shriver, the War on
Poverty director, said recently
that the college trained “are

bringing their gifts

Shriver also pointed out that
the demand for VISTA Volunteers is outstripping the supply.
He said that a total of 7,831
Volunteers have been requested
to serve in 577 projects in the
District of Columbia and every
state but Hawaii and Iowa.

of education
and encouragement to the tenement alleys and back country
roads. They have received one of
the truly great benefits of our society —-an excellent education. In
VISTA they will be able to share
this benefit with others and confirm the humane values which
our colleges and universities represent."
(Continued on Page 3)

EXPLAINING MEDICARE

midmi of rural Knox county,

He pointed out that VISTA is
seeking Volunteers from the ranks
of the poor as well as from college campuses. “People who have

261 Assigned to the Hollows

Poverty-Stricken Appalachia Provides
Daily Challenge to VISTA Volunteers
Although Congress has earmarked more than a billion dollars to help cure the economic ills
°f Appalachia, the first tangible
s 'gn of the new prosperity seen
by the citizens of Davidson, Tennessee, is a 250-book library built
and maintained by VISTA Volunteers.

The library in Davidson,

a new
day school in Kentucky, and a

lina are some of the first results
of the massive attack on poverty
in the Appalachian region that
stretches from New York to
Alabama.
These programs are the work
of more than 261 VISTA Volunteers who have been assigned
the task of breaking through the
apathy, hopelessness and resignation that grip the Appalachian
communities where the coal has

out, the young people
have left, and tomorrow offers
less hope than yesterday.
In Davidson, home of the 250book library, five VISTA Volunteers attack poverty in this region
where two surveys have estimated the per capita income to
be approximately $200 a year.
The Volunteers work for the
LBJ and C Development CorpoIConlinuedon Page 3)

played

to older

Kentucky, hat become one of Volunteer Marilyn Barman's varied
tatkt. The 21-year-old graduate of Cornell University it working
on community development in the Appalachian heartland.

�DENNIS SCHMITT examines a piece of coal brought down to
Anaktuvik Pass, Alaska, by a tractor which he helped the village
to obtain. Previously, the coal was packed in by dog sled. Before
joining VISTA, Schmitt attended the University of California at
Berkeley where he majored in philosophy.
than articulate the special, pressing needs of these villages, you
would be performing a great

BETSY REEVE, a Volunteer at Hooper'* Bay, Alaska, talks with some of her well-bundled pupils
outside her home. A graduate of the University of Wisconsin, Miss Reeve chose to work in Alaska
and is serving with more than 50 other Volunteers in the state's isolated villages.

VISTA Volunteers
Go North of Nome
Fifty VISTA Volunteers have
fanned out of Anchorage hy bush
plane and boat to man their war
poverty
outposts
on
among
Alaskas isolated Eskimo villages.
One of the Eskimo requests is
for. Volunteers who know something about improving the breed
of Alaskan reindeer. If they can
furnish some tips on preserving
this season's catch of walrus
meat, so much the better.
The 50 Volunteers are the first
of 200 who arc needed to help the
state's indigenous population of
approximately 60,000 Eskimos.
Indians and Aleuts who rank as
the poorest economic group in
the nation. Many of these families
live on less than $1,000 a year.
Half of the adults have had less
than five years of school and nine
out of evesy ten families live in
substandard conditions.
The Alaska Volunteers took
their training at the University of
Alaska at Fairbanks, where they
were introduced to village life
and the customs of the people
who are not only the poorest
Americans, but also the most isolated.
The inaiorily of the Volunteers now work among the Eskimos in western Alaska and north
of the Arctic circle, but they are
also found among the Indian
communities and in urban centers
such as Anchorage. Part of their
•

training included special instruction in how to prepare for long
periods of awesome weather and
for days without sun.

Requests for Volunteers poured
into VISTA's Washington headquarters from more than half of
the stale's towns and villages following a letter from Senator E. L.
Bartlett explaining that the Volunteers could help make the settlements ‘‘better places to live.”
The letter was sent to all village
headmen.
Eskimos are a tough people
who excel at living close to nature. The Volunteers will assist
them to participate in many of
the state-wide service programs
that operate under the direction
of the' Alaska Department of
Economic Development and

of

interior

Alaska

•

residents

through a letter written to a
major newspaper by a Volunteer
living there."
Pointing out that most of the
Volunteers would be assigned to
the western and northwestern
areas of Alaska, Governor Egan
said: "Here you will face a great
•

challenge, perhaps the greatest of
if you did no more
your life
...

service.
“In no other situation would
you have such an opportunity to
use your own judgment and implement ideas.”
The Volunteers can be found
performing a variety of wideranging jobs. They have built
sawmills and taught music to
Eskimo children. At Bethel, a
Volunteer helped to construct a
breakwater to prevent flooding of
the village during spring thaws.
At nearby Hooper’s Bay one
of the Volunteers' main concerns
is to explore the possibility of
building a small “flash" freezing
plant to help exploit the abundant
fish resources in the area. The
fish cannot be marketed now because there are no facilities to
preserve them.
Further to the north, at .Anaktuvik Pass, a Volunteer has managed to get a tractor for the village to assist in hauling coal
down from the mountains for
winter fuel.

While doing all this the Volunteers must spend a certain amount
of time fishing and hunting so
they can eat. Although certain
staples are provided, the principal
items of their diet will be the
same as their Alaskan neighbor—seal, fish, reindeer, caribou and
game birds.
The Volunteers have learned
to pack ice for water, to ride a
dog sled, and to memorize the
recipes for reindeer stew and bear
steak.
In many villages, the outstanding form of recreation is to greet
the arrival of the mail plane. To
help fill this gap the Volunteers
are developing recreation programs for children, youth and
adults. They also encourage community efforts to provide facilities for meetings, libraries, health
services, and social activities.
In addition they are conducting pre-school classes, tutoring students, and carrying on an
adult education program. Other
projects include health, education
and community sanitation pro(Conlinned on Page 4)
•

Planning.
Speaking to the second contingent of VISTA Volunteers to
be sent to his stale. Alaska Governor William A. Egan told them
that “the VISTA Volunteers who
have preceded you into rural
Alaska arc already playing a significant role in the effort to upgrade village life.
"Some villages never heard
from are now part of the Alaskan
community of the whole because
of the efforts of VISTA Volunteers. For example, results of a
recent election in one such village were brought to the attention

VISTA Volunteer John Shivaly, Univarsity of North Carolina graduate, and Gay Whita, who
attended the University of Colorado, stroll beside a frozen river at Bethel, Alaska. Shively helped
to build the pilings at right which will prevent flooding and erosion during spring thaws. Miss
White teaches school.

�i

VISTA Aids Indians
In War Against Want
(Continued

from

Page I)

in housing without running water,
sanitary facilities, safe heating, or
electricity. The infant mortality
rate is 70 percent higher than
for the rest of the nation.
The outcome of the Indians’
war against want depends in large
measure upon how much help
and encouragement they receive.
Many of the Indians are undereducated, underskilled, and for
the most part, underfed. Help to
relieve these conditions is needed
desperately.
More than 200 Volunteers
from VISTA are now working on
half of the Indian reservations in
the nation because they feel that
the Oglala Sioux and the Mille
Lac Chippewas need help now,
•

not next year.
One of those who is helping is
Patrick Krijaz, a recent graduate

of the University of Minnesota,
who is now known around Gallup, N. M., as the “alcoholic
VISTA Volunteer.” Krijaz got
his title from the fact that he
concentrates on working with al-

coholic Indians, helping them to
get sober, stay sober, and assume
a productive role in society.
Elsewhere in the state, a six-

sided,

dome-roofed

hogan

is

home for Karen Murkett, Nor-

wich, Conn., who is spending a
year of her life among the Navajos on their reservation near
Lukachukai, Arizona. A graduate
of Wheelock College with a degree in pre-school education, Miss
Murkett drives a school bus some
30 miles a day to pick up her 15
four-year-old Indian students.
Krijaz and Miss Murkett are
typical of the first contingent of
218 VISTA Volunteers who have
agreed to spend a minimum of a
year on reservations throughout
the country in an attempt to help
the Indian achieve a measure of
parity in American society.
The Volunteers now serve 49
tribes, which represent 50 percent of the total Indian population in 16 states. They work with
the Seminole, the Crow, the
PATRICK KRIJAZ, University of Minnesota graduate, talks with the family of an alcoholic Navajo
Navajo, the Sioux, the Chippewa, at their home near Gallup, N.M. Assisting the Navajo
Tribal Council to fight the problem drinking
and the Apache.
among Indians, Krijaz helps patients treated for alcoholism to readjust to community life.
•

75% of VISTA Applicants With
College Skills Win Acceptance

AS AN EXAMPLE to Itto rest of the neighborhood, VISTA Volunteer* In west side Philadelphia cleaned up, repaired, and nearly
rebuilt a dilapidated row house which will serve the girl volunteers as living quarters. Clearing debris are Mary Sullivan, University of Massachusetts graduate; Marean Brown, who attended
San Jose State College, and Frank Rubright of Alma College.

(Continued from Page I)
In selecting Volunteers, VISTA
places emphasis on the quality of
the individual rather than on
specific skills. “We have projects
for almost all skills,” Ferguson
said, “but the most crucial skill
of all is the ability to listen, understand, and communicate with
people. This holds true whether
the volunteer is a liberal arts
major or an engineer.”
Liberal arts students who have
become VISTA Volunteers set up
libraries where none existed before, renovate rural schools, teach
adult literacy, tutor dropouts, survey health needs, organize community meetings, lead pre-school
classes, help mothers in day-care
centers, direct recreation programs, conduct neighborhood
clean-up campaigns, work with
youth gangs and delinquents.
Vice-President Humphrey,
speaking to students at the University of Minnesota, described
the “special role for the college

students of today in VISTA.” He
called college training the key to
service.
“Help clean up own own backyard,” he urged. “We all owe
something, everyone of us who
is privileged to have an education. We owe something to the
society that made it possible for
us to have this education.
“The easiest thing for this rich
country is to dole out cash,” he
continued. “What is more difficult is to be able to extend the
hand of fellowship, the hand of
assistance, the hand of education,
the hand of training, to help people slowly but surely lift themselves.”
The Vice-President said he believed that by spending a year in
service to America, VISTA Volunteers will dramatically affect
their own lives as well as the lives
of the poor.
“You have the opportunity,"
he said, “to test your skills and
principles in the service of your

Appalathia
(Continued

from

Page I)

•

them.

area

own.

A challenge to VISTA-and the nation

ration, a private, non-profit organization formed to administer
the area’s Community Action
Program. LBJ and C stands for
Livingston, Byrdstown, Jamestown, and Cookeville, the county
seats of the four counties included in the original organization.
The five Volunteers will live
in Davidson for a year, concentrating on juvenile delinquents
and drop-outs. They will guide
community development programs, conduct recreation, education, and health services.
The task is far from easy.
Glenn Ferguson, Director of
VISTA, said: “We tell our
trainees it may take several
months before they’re accepted as
part of the community.” A major
goal is to get local citizens to express their needs and then help
evolve a program that will meet
A depressed rural

fellow man under conditions
which will give full scope to your
abilities and imagination.”
A year in VISTA offers unique
practical experience to the students who plan to return to college, continue on to graduate
school, or pursue their careers.
Through work in widely varying
fields. Volunteers often discover
interest in careers which lead to
the further study of medicine,
education, social work, public
welfare, law and public administration.
Living and working among the
poor in such places as Eskimo
villages, Appalachian hollows,
Indian reservations, and city slums
proves to be a powerful experience in learning and understanding for most Volunteers.
Although their primary task is
to add a new dimension to the
lives of the poor, most find that
after their year is up, they have
added a new dimension to their

such
119),

as Davidson (population
has problems. Located halfway

between Nashville and Knoxville,
deep in the mountains, it once
was a flourishing mining town
that boasted a movie theater, a
telephone office, and a depot
where the trains stopped twice a
day to load coal.
But the mines gave out more
than ten years ago and most of
the people have moved away. The
railroad tracks are overgrown
with weeds and the theater and
telephone office have been razed.
A schoolhouse still stands but it
was abandoned two years ago
when the supply of pupils dried
up. Those children who remain
rise before dawn to catch a bus
to the school in Clark Range. 18
miles away. Few from Davidson
finish high school.
This lack of purpose is one of
the major problems facing the
five VISTA Volunteers who have
been assigned to the community.
Gerry English, from Santa Rosa,
California, and Barbara McCollaum, of Tucumcari, N. M., have
been working for nine months to
give Davidson a “sense of com•

munity

The main obstacle to their efforts is indifference. Miss English has observed: “They’ve lost
so much. You insulate yourself
against caring when caring doesn’t
count. That’s what's happened
here since the mines dried out.”
The 261 VISTA Volunteers
are working in 34 projects in
eight states of Appalachia: Alabama, Kentucky, Maryland,
North Caroling, Pennsylvania,
Tennessee, Virginia, and West
•

Virginia.

Ninety VISTA Volunteers are
living and working in rural Kentucky. They serve in 13 of the
poorest counties of the slate,
which are among the 300 most
impoverished counties in America.
Middlefork, Kentucky, is another Appalachian community.
Once fairly prosperous, its major
economic staples were coal and
tobacco. But the coal ran out,
and the big tobacco producers
found better quality crops and
cheaper transportation elsewhere.

Now Middlefork is left with 300
or so residents who support themselves by subsistence farming and
by selling cucumbers at 11 cents

per hundred pounds.
Middlefork might have continued indefinitely in this same
fashion if it weren’t for Jean
Honrath, a young, energetic
VISTA Volunteer assigned to that
community by her VISTA project
sponsor, the Council of Southern
Mountains.'

In something more than nine
months in Middlefork, Miss Honrath has made only a start toward
alleviating the material side of
the community's plight. But in a
less tangible sense she has made
large-scale progress in reaffirming
the self-respect of the community
in its own eyes and in motivating
them toward changing the conditions.
•

A former uuitenl at Contra

Costa Junior College in the San

Francisco suburb of El Cerrito.
California. Miss Honrath developed an early interest in work-

ing with younger people. She de-

cided that her skills and temperament would best be suited in
helping to break the vicious cycle
of Appalachian poverty at the
children's level.
She concentrated on Middlefork's children and not only
helped to establish its first Boy
Scout troop, but also ran a highly
successful summer school program for more than two dozen
local children aged 8 to 16. '
Middlefork adults have received their share of help as well.
Miss Honrath has organized a
program so that unemployed
fathers from the community can
spend several days a week working to improve the Middlefork
school.
She is srlf-effachiK when she
speaks of her success in Middle•

‘i've only done what the
wants.” she claims.
"I’m far from overconfident, yet
I'm optimistic at the same time.
My guess is that what we've done
will last and grow.”
fork.

community

�Rigorous Training Gives Volunteers
Skills to Fight Poverty's Seamy Side
VISTA’s training program gives
its volunteers a long, realistic
look at the seamiest side of poverty while equipping them with
the skills and techniques needed
to combat it.
The tough, rigorous training
schedule, lasting for several weeks
—ten hours a day—is not counted
as part of the Volunteer’s year of
service.
Training is conducted by nonprofit organizations—universities,
colleges, or social action agencies
—which have the experience and
facilities necessary to train adults
with a variety of educational

backgrounds.
Some of the training institutions concentrate on the problems of the mentally retarded.
Others deal with the plight of Indian families and migrant laborers.
But each training cycle
makes sure that the volunteers
fully understand VISTA’s purpose—and the roles that trainees
are expected to play after graduation.
The Volunteers go directly
from training to assignments in
slums, migrant worker camps, Indian reservations, and Job Corps
centers throughout the country.
Every effort is made to
match the skills, abilities and in•

•

terests of each Volunteer with re-

quests and descriptions of assignments that are received from
agencies and organizations sponsoring VISTA projects.
One of the primary objectives
of VISTA training is to allow a
Volunteer to relate his previous
background and existing skills to
the aims and requirements of the
projects in which he will work.
The majority of the training programs lakes place right in the
slums, migrant camps, Appalachian hollows and Indian reservations. It is as direct and practical as possible.
The field experience may take
the form of working in community projects on the Maricopa
and Gila River Indian reservations south of Phoenix, Arizona.
There 26 VISTA Volunteers installed a new roof on the community center, helped clean yards,
houses, and established two
all in four
nursery schools
weeks.
In an industrialized, urban
area such as New York, the field
placement activity may be composed of helping retarded persons
between 17 and 35 to learn the
New York City transportation
system and how to use a cafeteria. Or it may be acquainting
—

•

people with family planning
clinics, helping to organize tenant
councils, working with street
gangs or finding jobs for youths
whose teenage criminal records
have blocked them from employment.

Two Volunteers assigned to
serve with migrant workers in
California were sent to Belgrade,
Florida, to live for a week with
migrant workers. Their experi-

ence included working in the lettuce fields as well as assisting in
the operation of a pre-school program for children.

Some of the institutions which
have participated in VISTA training include the University of
Utah, National Federation of Settlements in Chicago, University
of Alaska. Tuskegee Institute in
Alabama, Community Services
Foundation in St. Petersburg.
Florida: the North Carolina
Fund, Arizona State University,
and the Columbia University
Graduate School of Social Work.
In addition to these institutions which direct the training
program, more than 100 public
and private agencies engaged in
work among the poor are cooperating with VISTA by providing
practical field experience during
•

training.

VOLUNTEER KENNETH VAN COMPTON, 19, talks with a man
whose apartment has been hit by fire. Van Compton provides
information and help for the man and his family to find a new
place to live on the Lower East Side of New York where the
former Tulsa University student is concentrating his efforts.

VISTA: Questions and Answers
i). W hat is vista?
A. VISTA (Volunteers In Service To America) is
one of the major anti-poverty programs established
by the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964. It offers
an opportunity for men and women from all eco-

nomic. geographic, social and age groups to join
the nation's War On Poverty.
VISTA Volunteers work directly with those who
are not sharing in this nation’s promise. They offer
their services and skills wherever poverty exists:
in cities, small towns and rural areas, in tenements
and shacks, on Indian reservations or in migrant
worker camps, among the sick and disabled, the
young and the old.
They serve for a year where they are requested
and needed—in the 50 States, the District of
Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and the
Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands. Living and
working with the people they help. VISTA Volunleers are there, prepared at all times to assist,
advise, befriend. VISTA Volunteers serve for a
minimum of a year, plus their training period.
i). U hat do VISTA Volunteers do?
A. In a wide variety of ways, Volunteers work to
provide new hope, dignity and skills that can help
lift people out of poverty. The specific fields in
which they work include: education, health, vocational counseling, recreation, agriculture, conservation, sanitation, construction, community services
—the list, like the problems that poverty itself
creates, is practically inexhaustible.

t). Are VISTA Volunteers paid?
A. Volunteers receive a monthly living allowance
that is enough to gel by on in the areas to which
they arc assigned. The allowance covers housing,
food, clothing, and transportation. In addition,
they receive approximately $75 a month for such
personal incidentals as laundry, haircuts, and rec-

reation. Medical and dental care are also provided.
For every month of service, $50 is set aside for
each Volunteer, The entire amount is paid to
Volunteers upon completion of service.

V.

If hat are the houn

of

work?

A. VISTA Volunteers have a full-time commitment to the people they serve. It is no 9-to-5 job.
The Volunteer stands ready to offer assistance
whenever he is needed.

Q. W hat are the baric requirements for
joining VISTA?
A. You must be at least 18 years old
You must be a United Stales citizen or a permanent resident of this country or one of its territories.
You must have no dependents under 18 years
of age.

Q. How does VISTA

service

status?

affect draft

A. VISTA Volunteers are not exempt from the
draft. However, VISTA Volunteers are usually
deferred. (1) The trainee sends a request to his
local draft board for deferment for the period of
his VISTA service with a copy to VISTA; (2)
VISTA writes his draft board certifying that he
is a VISTA trainee and keeps the draft board
notified. While this almost always gets a deferment,
the decision concerning draft status is entirely up
to the local draft board.

Q. How do I

join VISTA?
A. Anyone who wishes to become a VISTA Volunteer must complete a preliminary application form.
Immediately after VISTA receives the preliminary
application, the individual is sent a detailed queslionnaire which asks for background information
and The names and addresses bT~ af least five

references.
There are no personal interviews and no tests
or examinations.

Q. If I submit
am

I obligated

an application
to join?

to

VISTA Volunteers
Go North of Nome
(Continued from Page 2)
grams under the general direction
of visiting doctors and public
health nurses.
Another project which will
give a boost to the lagging
Eskimo economy is a plan whereby Volunteers will help the Alaskans to establish businesses to
encourage the preservation of
ancient arts and crafts.
skills are heeded in
/\n
Alaska.
VISTA Volunteer
couples are sought who know
•

building, homemaking, and social

services. Need.ed,

too, are persons
with farm experience, cooperative
backgrounds, range
managers,
weather observers, teachers at all
levels and of all subjects, recreational experts, lawyers, linguists,
economists, and planners.
There’s a great deal of talk
about the challenges that the War
on Poverty presents.
Perhaps one of the -greatest
challenges of all lies north of
Nome.

VISTA,

1

A. No, you are not obligated—but your application should be submitted with the understanding
that you are sincerely interested in joining VISTA.

Q. Do Volunteers have a choice about the
location and type of work they do?
A. Yes. The VISTA questionnaire provides ample
opportunity for listing your geographical and work
assignment preferences. VISTA attempts to honor
these preferences as far as it is practicable, but
VISTA’s concern also is to match a Volunteer’s
experience and abilities, demonstrated and developed during training, to a specific need in a
specific project.

Q. How quickly does VISTA respond

I'm interested in VISTA. Please send me a preliminary appli-

I cation and

more

!

information

j Name

I

Address

to an

application?
A. After you send in your detailed questionnaire
and if your references respond immediately, you
should have a response from VISTA within 30

City

days.

Q. Are trainees paid?
A. Yes. Living, travel and medical expenses are
paid. In addition, the $50 a month stipend begins
with the start of a Volunteer’s training.

I

State

j Mail

Zip Code

to;

i). Are Volunteers assigned singly or in a

VISTA

A. Very few Volunteers are assigned singly. VISTA
prefers to assign Volunteers in teams. Where teams
are not needed, at least two Volunteers are assigned to a given community or area.

Washington, D. C. 20506

team?

I

1

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                    <text>1

VISTA
VOLUNTEERS

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

■■■

BHIV

(See Page

VOLUME 16

I

■

RESEARCH VS.

fl

UNDERGRADE
(See Page

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 1966

NO. 36

Deferment Notices Are
Following Old Pattern
To date, there has been no official change in procedure for
notifying draft boards of student
status at the university, according to Mrs. Carolyn Haensly, assistant director of Admissions and
Records.
Present procedure for notifying
local draft boards of a student’s
status, as explained by Mrs.
Haensly, is, when a male student’s
advance register is asked if he
wants a form which states only
whether or not he is a full time
student and the program for
which he is registered. She said
that if the student requests the
form, it is held by the Office
of Admissions and Records until
the semester begins.
Mrs. Haensly noted, that if the
proposed change goes into effect,
the procedure used during the
Korean War whereby a student’s
class rank was sent to the local
draft board at the end of the
academic year will probably be
adopted.

The UB Blues to present "Spring Sing-Out" in Clark Gym, April 16 at 8:30 p.m. (L to R, Rear) John
Slattery, David McDowell, Fred Hill and Paul Whitcomb; (Front) Jerry Marmillo, Ron Capuano, Bob
Van Slyke and Paul Sipson.

Six Candidates Seek Residence Office;
Elections Are Thursday and Friday
Inter-Residence Council, the
resident student government, will
hold elections for President, Vice
President, Secretary, and Treasurer, Thursday and Friday, April
14 and 15.
The voting machines will be
in Tower Lobby, Goodyear Lobby, and the Allenhurst Lounge
in Goodyear from 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. and 4 to 6:30 p.m.
The new officers will assume
their duties at the 'beginning of
the hall officers and hall representatives will be elected.
The present IRC officers are:
President Julian Burstein, Vice
President Dan Brodsky, Secretary
Joyce Black and Treasurer Gary
Roberts.

Mr. Roberts mentioned the
establishment and financing of
the Prism, the first bi-weekly
resident newspaper, as one of
the major IRC accomplishments
during the past year.
CANDIDATES

President
Joel Feinman, a sophomore
biology major has been a representative from Tower to the IRC,
Chairman of the Food Committee,
member of the Standards Committee, a sponsor of the original
Dress Standards Resolution and
the Senior Women’s resolution.
“I’d like to use what we’ve already done on curfews and extend it I’d also like to see the
establishment of a Residence
Judiciary amendment either by
the establishment of the proposed Inter-Residence Judiciary
or by revision of the J.B. system.”
—

President
Larry Pivnick, a Freshman Political Science major, is a representative on Freshman Class
Council, a member of the Public
Relations Committee of Allenhurst, Film Chairman for Winter
Week, and Personal Manager
—

-

elect of the UB Men’s Glee Club.
“To make our dorms more comfortable, we must continue to
improve upon the food reforms.
Such things as seconds on Saturday, Student participation in
choosing food and an Allenhurst
Snack Bar would be great improvements. I will also strive for
inter-dorm activities, but most
important, student interest must
be -built up in IRC activities to
attain greater residency unity.”
Vie* President

—

IRC.
sentative from Allenhurst and
a member of the Judiciary Committee and Food Committee. “One
of the most important things IRC
will be faced with next year is
passing the Inter-Resident’s Judiciary or at least revising the
JB system in the dorms. 1 know
how IRC works and what it takes
to -get things done on it. I think
I am qualified to do it."

Treasurer

“Simply because a student ranks
above the standard, commented
Mrs. Haensly, it doesn’t necessarily mean that he won't be
drafted.” She emphasized that
class rank is just one criteria
used by the draft board.
She continued, "during the Korean War they did not go solely
on the basis of rank in class. I
don’t think they will now.”
Commenting on the value of

—

Alan Sturtz, a freshman biology
major, has served as General
Manager of the Union Board
Mixer Committee and the Publicity Committee, has participated
in the Senate and the Student
Activities Committee and the
Questionnaire Sub-committee. “I
hope to get prime dates for the
IRC functions by coordinating
with the Senate’s Student Activities Committee. I also would like
to allocate more funds for the
Prism in order that it might re-

All students interested in tak-

ing the Selective Service College
Qualification Test can obtain an
information bulletin and an application card from the Student
Testing Center, 316 Harriman
Library. The examination may be
taken the morning of May 14,
May 21 or June 3 at Canisius College or at the State University
College (Elmwood Avenue). The
State University of New York at
Buffalo will administer the examination on May 21 from 12 to
3:30 p.m. and on June 3 from 8:30

4:30 p.m.

determining draft status by rank
in class, Mrs Haensly said that

she doesn't think rank is a relia
hie indication. “If the class is
particularly smart, the student
suffers.” However, she said that
the Office of Admissions and Records does not object to sending
grades to local draft boards if
they are required to do so.

New Policy Seen
For Senate Funds
Student Association Treasurer
Carl Levine has announced that
the Finance Committee of the
Student Senate is reevaluating its
entire policy on student funds.
“In the past,” Mr. Levine explained, “too much emphasis was
placed on economy because of
limited funds. An attempt will be
made to get the most out of students instead of funds.”
A Faculy-Student Association
sub-board, composed of four students, one administrator, and one
faculty member, has been set up
to determine the amount of funds
to be allocated for each activity
sponsored by the Senate. These
groups, numbering about sixty
and including Union Board and
athletic groups, must submit their
budgets to Mr. Levine in the Senate Office by April 15. All activity expenses must be fully testified in writing.
Mr. Levine said that he hopes
to see a decrease in the current
$47 per semester activity fee, and
that he sees no reason why such
a reduction and a more efficient
financial system cannot become a
reality. The present budget is
$90,000. Mr. Levine said that the
probable figure for next year is
over $100,000.
The Senate also intends to give
additional attention to guest
speakers and concerts, according
to Mr. Levine. He added that
these activities would be financed
by the Senate."

Baird, Founder of Parents Aid Society,
Encourages Clubs on College Campuses

By JO ANNE LEEGANT
William Baird, founder of the Parents Aid Society first received publicity when his arrest last
Secretary
May led to the removal of a New York State law
Sharon Shulman, a freshman which prohibited dissemination of birth control
majoring in American Studies, is
devices and information.
on the Executive Committee of
He has since opened a birth control clinic in
Freshman Class Council, a memHempstead, Long Island, geared to the needs of
ber of Union Board Literature
the poor and is now encouraging student involveand Drama Committee, a Specment in his efforts.
trum reporter, secretary of NSA
Hofstra University students who became conStudent Discounts Sub-committee cerned with birth control while working at the
and a member of Goodyear East clinic, have organized a Parents Aid Club. MemSocial Committee, “i hope to rebers are instructed about various methods of
late IRC to the residents by a birth control and do volunteer work at the clinic.
Guest Speakers Bureau and an Other colleges and universities are planning simiexpanded Prism. I also plan to lar organizations.
work for the abolition of curfews
Baird first became interested in the problem of
and to enable sophomore women birth control while working for the Emco Drug
Coroporation. It is his contention that lack of birth
to live off-campus."
control among the poor prevents upward social
„
Secretary
mobility and may lead to tragedy. He cited one
Judy Snyder, a junior Sociology case in which a 29 year old woman died in her atmajor, has been Secretary of the tempt to induce abortion with a wire coat hanger.
IRC Activities Committee and
For two years Baird risked arrest by going into
low income areas and distributing free birth conChairman of the Cultural Committee of Schoellkopf. She said trol information and devices. He formed the Parents
she would like to see improved Aid Society and in May 1965 purchased a mobile
relations between IRC and House van for the society to extend its efforts to disCouncil and IRC and the Senate seminate information ande devices.
Because of his activities he lost his job as cliniand plans to work on a curfew
system for women. “I like to feel cal director for Emco and was arrested May IS
actively involved, and IRC is a for violation of an 84 year old New York State law
fine organization to be involved which stated that “a person who sells, lends,
(Cont’d on P. «)
__.lj
with.”
—

—

‘••I Mar.

WILLIAM IAWD
AM SocMy

Parent*

�i

Editorial Comment

.

.

SYMPTOMS
letter
In
printed in last Friday’s Spectrum from
the Committee For Victory in Viet Nam, it is possible
to notice symptoms of the massive failure of nerve to
which this country is occasionally subject. The letter
bore the signature of a faculty member at this University
and included the most blatant and stupid “red baiting”.
This crude and rhetorically irrelevent tactic might be
expected from the more youthful guardians of the nation's purpose who signed the letter, but to see this
shameful display of shrill and ignorant “ad hominem”
argument condoned, and even supported, by a man who
is supposed to be teaching clear thought and respectable
argument (a philosopher, no less) is unpardonable.
Another symptom visible on this campus to anyone
who cares to look is the “Pontius Pilate’" (at best) and
“know nothing” (at worst) attitude of most of the
faculty toward the Graduate Faculty Committee on Selective Service.
This committee has been attempting for a number
of weeks to develop a dialogue concerning the question
of student deferments for the Draft and has met, not so
much with failure as with a deafening silence. The
paranoia created by the war is obviously schizophrenic,
made up of screaming crowds on one hand, and a
perverse personal silence on the other.
THOUGHTS ON THE GREEKS
In another letter printed last week, the lack of attention payed to the "Greeks” by this paper was lamented. To set the record straight, once and for all, the
Spectrum is not “Anti-Greek”.
As far as this paper is concerned, the “Greeks” are
merely another example of trivial campus organizations.
When they make news, the Spectrum is perfectly willing
to print it—just as it is willing to print “real” news
and announcements stemming from any campus group,
(like say, for example, Spring Dance Committee, or the
Cisco Kid Fan Club).
The “Greek System” (what system?), to the extent
which it brutalizes and thwarts the individuality of its
adherents, is an evitand antf-educational institution, but
beyond that, it is merely trivial.

THE

SPECTRUM

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

Editor-In-Chief
Business Manager
News Editor
Staff —Loretta

JEREMY TAYLOR
RAYMOND

D

VOLPE

ALICE EDELMAN
GREENE
Assistant
Angelme. Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen
Green,
Peter Lederman, Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan Schroeder. Sharon Shulman,
Eileen Teitler, Nancy Toder. Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg.
Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Staff— -Bonnie Bartow. Ron Ellsworth. Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb,

J. B

Sharcot

SUSAN

Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner,

Sports Editor
Castro, Mike Dolan.

Martha Tack, William Weinstein

SCHUELEIN
Steve Farbman. Bob Frey.
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Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman.

Staff— Joanne Bouchier,

Copy Editor

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Staff—Carol Becker, Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern, Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer,
Claire Shottenfeld. Susan Zurkerberg
Staff—Terry

Mancini

••

r

*

■&gt;

Tuesday, April 12, 1966

oCetlerA

a

Staff—Mike

r

.

THE RISING TIDE OF VIOLENCE
Last week the headquarters of the Berkeley Viet
Nam Day Committee was bombed with several persons
in the frame house sustaining minor injuries. The second such incident in a matter of weeks in San Francisco
(the DuBois Club headquarters were also bombed soon
after that organization was appended to the Attorney
General’s List), the violence in Berkeley indicates that
the growing hysteria of war is threating to plunge
America into the kind of cultural paranoia that has so
often provoked similar incidents in Alabama and Mississippi. Beatings and Bombings from Boston to Berkeley raise the question: Will the War in Viet Nam
“Southernise” the United States?

Audrey Logel,

j

S ri CTRUM

PACE TWO

Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
Angelo, Audrey Cash. Pat Rosenfeld, Steve

Silverman.

Joseph

Photography Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Staff —Don Blank. Peter Bonneau. Joseph Feyes, Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber,
Marc Levine, Ivan Makuch, Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman,
Robert Wynne

Circulation Manager
Advisor

DIANE LEWIS

IRENE WILLET

Faculty

Financial

EDITORIAL

Advisor

DALLAS GARBER

POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

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to

the (Editor

Red-Baiting Continues
TO THE EDITOR:
Ever since the Department of
Justice launched its investigation of the W.E.B. Du Bois Club
of America the diligent supporters of the Establishment have
renewed their efforts to attack
the activities of campus groups
through a spate of red baiting.
Initiated locally by State Senator Earl Brydges and echoed by
the Common Council of Buffalo,
it has found its way onto the
campus through a letter in the
Spectrum attacking the Spirit
and
the Sword
and Youth
Against War and Fascism.
The least one can say for the
integrity of the far right is
psychopathic
their
consistent

fear of communism. However, we
know that such foolish consistency on the part of so-called
anticommunist “liberals” does
not exist. They “do not deny
the right of a person to hold
any belief he wishes to . :
They only deny his .right to
exercise and practice his beliefs, And if red-baiting does not
suffice to intimidate anyone
there is always the Feinberg law
and loyalty oaths and the stick
of economic intimidation to attempt to suppress one’s personal
political beliefs.
As far as who believes in the
destruction of all “our (does this
“our” also include the Indian of

the reservation, the Negro in
economic bondage, the poor of
Appalachia also?) liberties. This
I must submit is rubbish and a
downright lie. And to elaborate
the document this point I would
be willing to debate Dr. Zimmerman or any other signer or nonsigner of that letter.
I’m also against “extremism.”
The extremism of anti-communists, those of us who lived
through the fifties failed ourselves and today’s generation in
the fight against McCarthyism.
I have vowed never to be part
of such a dismal retreat again.
Ed Wolkenstein
Editor, Spirit and the Sword

Column On Abortion Considered “Inexcusable”
TO THE EDITOR:

James Callan’s column (The
Right) is often silly and while
this is perhaps not admirable
(since he thinks he’s serious) at
least it is innocuous. Perhaps he
can be forgiven for continually
tripping over his soggy political
abstractions.
His column on abortion, however, is inexcusable. The black

or white, Right rationally

(see

elsewhere on the same page,
“the Communists avowed purpose is the destruction of all
our liberties.”) is most evident
in his concluding statement,
.
.
manifest evidence shows
that abortion is not always moral, and hence is never moral.”
If Callan knows anything about
morality
(the
Judeo-Christian
heritage or otherwise) it has cer-

tainly never been evident in his
writing (“If in fact there is a
deformity, let the mother take
a knife and do what she was
so willing to do beforehand.")
Had any nightmares lately,
Mr. Callan? Ever heard of human decency? or compassion?

What you have written smells
of something wretched.
Robert McCubbin

VISTA Visits Campus to Recruit Volunteers
By

TERRY SEAL

Students seeking an opportunity to volunteer their services in
the war on poverty on Indian
reservations, among migrant farm
workers, in urban slums, and in
the rural pockets of poverty ranging from the Applachian hollows
to Alaskan villages will have an
opportunity to meet with the representatives from the Volunteers
In Service To America, (VISTA),
from April 18 to 20.
“We’re looking for volunteers
of all backgrounds and abilities,”
reported Felton Gibson, leader of
the VISTA group to visit the
campus. He described VISTA volunteers as “people who can listen,
understand and communicate
with others and are committed
enough to live and work for a
year among the poor in this coun-try-' f
VISTA volunteers serve for a
period of one year, and receive
living expenses and medical care.
Added to this allowance for food,
housing, travel, and clothing, they
receive a stipend of $600 at the
end of their service period. Currently there are over 2,1000 VISTA volunteers in training or on
assignment throughout the United
States. About 75 per cent of these
people are between the ages of
18 and 24, although anyone from
18 to 85 can participate.
“Students now serving as volunteers are involved in a list of
activities as long as the problems
which poverty creates,” Mr. Gibson stated. Literacy programs, organizing clean-up campaigns, developing recreational programs,
tutoring dropouts, setting up libraries, organizing community
meetings, and surveying heallth
needs are among the many programs now being conducted. VISTA volunteers have renovated
one-room schoolhouses, started
night classes for adults, and extended legal services on bail bond
projects.
The VISTA group begins locally with an organization to deal in
people while working with a local
sponsor. VISTA goes where its
help has been requested: cities,
rural areas, assignments in institutions for the mentally handicapped.

Volunteers may request service
in a specific geographic area of
the United States or its Territories and indicate their preference in type of assignment. A six

week training program to prepare
them for their work follows acceptanee.
To join VISTA no entrance examirtation or interview is required. Anyone over 18 is eligible; there are no educational or
experience requirements. Appli-

cations and further information
may be obtained from the VISTA
group visiting the campus from
April 18 to 20.
From Monday, April 11 to

Thursday, April 14, a 15 minute
movie on the VISTA project in
Durham, North Carolina called
Eleven Small Miracles, will be

shown at 11, 12, 1, 2, and 3 p.m.
in 231 Norton. On Wednesday at
7 p.m. in Norton 231 an open discussion will be conducted on the
topic: “Volunteerism in America
Today.” There will also be a booth
in Norton Lobby with field representatives to speak to any group
or class meeting.

Cjoodman
Against such direct action as
the Civil Rights sit-ins, the student sit-in of Sproul Hall at
Berkeley, and draft-card burnings,
it is always said that they foment
disrespect for law and order and
lead to a general breakdown of
civil society. Even when it is
granted that due process and ordinary administration are not
working, because of prejudice, unconcern, doubletalk, or tyrannical arrogance, nevertheless, it is
alleged, the recourse to civil disobedience entails even worse
evils.
This is an apparently powerful
argument. People who engage in
civil disobedience tend to concede
it but to claim that, in the crisis,
they cannot do otherwise: they
are swept by indignation or outrage, the situation is intolerable,
they act for a “higher” justice
or humanity.
Yet is it true that particular

direct actions of this kind, which

are always aimed at very specific
abuses, in fact lead to general

lawlessness? Where is the evie.g., statistics of corredence
lative disorder in the community,
or an increase of unspecific lawless acts among the direct-actionists themselves
to prove the
connection? Such flimsy evidence
as I have seen weighs in the
opposite direction: e.g., crime and
delinquency have seemed to diminish where there has been political direct action by Negroes;
and the academic and community
spiirt of Berkeley this year is better than ordinary.
On theoretical grounds, indeed,
the probability is that a specific
direct action, especially if it is
successful or partially successful,
will tend to increase civil order,
—

—

—

since it revives the belief that
the community is ours; whereas
the inhibition of direct action
against an intolerable situation inevitably increases anomie and
therefore general lawlessness.
(Add to this the increasing arrogance and lawlessness of the repressing forces, as in the South
or among northern police, when
they feel they are “misunderstood” or are being legal against
their own moral consciences.’ The
enforcement of “law and order”
at all costs aggravates the tensions that lead to explosions like
Watts. I have not yet read the
book but I think that this is the
thesis of Arthur Waskow’s From
Race Riot to Sit-In: “creative disorder” increases civil order and
diminishes anomie.
The conventional argument,
that general lawlessness is increased by specific disobedience
for political purposes, depends
on the sociological proposition
that law and order are by and
large maintained by deterrence
and penalties. But in normal
civil societies this is not the
case. People who don't pick
pockets refrain, by and large,
not because of fear of arrest and
jail but because of their upbringing, socialization, and sense of
themselves; and in these, fear and
anxiety usually have an anti-social rather than a social effect.

Many criminologists and penologists would agree, rather, with
the anarchist proposition that
there would be less crime, especially serious felonies, if there
were no jails, since jails are

schools of crime, most serious
crimes are committed by repeaters, and fear triggers panic behavior.

.

�Tuesday, April 12, 1966

S P E C T R U M

Johnson Administration Attached
In Speech By Candidate M. Bender
“The Johnson Administration
they have labeled the ‘Great Society’ but they
have in fact fostered 'The Age of
Deception’ on the American people,” said Republican candidate
tor the 39th Congressional District Miles D. Bender in a speech
to the student body April 6.
i
has created what

“The so-called ‘Great Society’,"
he continued, "is at best a shameful attempt to give hope to the

poverty stricken of this country.
And false hope it is. The poverty
programs are ill conceived and improperly instituted if at all. It is
a corrupt political football game
played at the expense of the impoverished of this nation, and to
the detriment of all the tax payers,” according to Mr. Bender.
In an interview with the Spectrum, Mr. Bender denounced Fed-

eral subsidization of milk and
school lunches for children from
underdeveloped areas as another
instance where “no long range
planning is involved.”
“The ‘Age of Deception’,” Mr.
Bender proclaimed, “exists in the
conduct of the war in Viet Nam.”

The SPECTRUM

Partneri Jf*

Ac.

re Si,

Following his speech, a student
asked Mr. Bender his opinion of
the action taken by State Senate
Majority Leader Earl Brydges to
investigate college demonstrators
and their activities on state campuses.

Mr. Bender replied, “I do not
support these demonstrations, but
I must agree with their right to
demonstrate so long as the demonstrations are peaceful and do
not advocate the forceful overthrow of our government or support other organizations that do

Published by
’

Ward Supervisor and Congressional Candidate Miles D. Bender
He pledged himself to “responsible criticism” of the “massive
failures of our foreign policy,
particularly in the Dominican
Republic and Cuba, Vietnam, and
NATO.

Jkyoll &amp; Smitl /-^tinting
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

so.”

Phone 876-2284

1959 graduate of UB, Mr.
Bender is Director of Public Relations at International Life Insurance Company at Buffalo and
supervisor of the 18th Ward.
A

PAGE

THRU

UB Blues Sponsors Spring Sing-Out
The UB Blues, a popular men’s
vocal octet, will sponsor a Spring
Sing-Out Saturday, April 16 at
8:30 P.M. in Clark Gym. Performing with the Blues will be the
University of Rochester Yellowxersity Saints. Small group singjackets and the St. Lawrence Uniing has been traditional on college campuses throughout the
country and the groups featured
Saturday are among the finest in
the East.
Since their inception in 1962
as a barbershop quartet, the UB
Blues have expanded both in size
and versatility. Members of the
Buffalo Yacht Club provided the
impetus for the production last
summer of the Blues' first LP
album, entitled “Blue Skys” (on
sale now in the bookstore).

'In contrast to the larger (13)
size of the Yellowjaekets and the
Saints, the Blues have seven singers and feature the talented voice
of UB coed, Julie Olsen. This year
the Blues have made guest appearances at Montreal nightclubs
especially popular with the
Frenoh-Canadian college set and
have had annual engagements at
the Buffalo Yacht Club, the Buffalo Country Club, the Rochester
Country Club, and college campuses throughout the East. The
Blues have added color and charm
to countless events with their
unique combination of musical
warmth and wit, boundless enthusiasm, and precision blend.
The Yellowjaekets are veterans
of ten years singing experience,
including a concert tour of Europe in the summer of 1963 sponsored by the United Service Organization (USO). They will be
performing such songs as “Nothing Like a Dame,” “Girl from Ipanema,” "And I Love Her,” “Officer Krupke,” “I’ll Remember
April” and others from their latest album “New Sounds - by the
-

Yellowjaekets.”
Since their formation in 1950

YONKS FOR A SOSO.

as an organization of thirteen undergraduate songsters from St.
Lawrence University, the Saints
have developed a dynamic reputation which keeps them in demand throughout the Eastern
states. Among their distinctions,
the Saints have been the featured
entertainment at the popular Cellar'Door Night Club in Washington, D.C.; and the renowned
Edgewater Gulf Resort Hotel in
Biloxi, Mississippi. Their extensive traveling has brought them
into millions of homes through

the media of television appearances including WDSU TV in New

Orleans and WRC NBC-TV in
Washington, D.C. The Saints’ re■

pertoire includes such numbers
as “Dancing on the Ceiling,” “The
Party’s Over,” "The Way You
Look Tonight,” “Avallne,” and
“Bermuda” plus other selections

from their fourth record album.
The Spring Sing-Out is a “first”
on the UB campus. Never before
have such polished and successful
collegiate singing groups appeared together in concert here.
General admission is $1.50 with

a special student rate of $1.00.
Tickets are available at the Norton and Baird Box Offices, at the
table in Norton lobby, the Alumni Office, and at Denton's Music

Store downtown.

MENC Holds "Student Happenings";
Consists of Premiere Performances
The Buffalo Chapter of the Music Educators National Conference will present “Student Hap-

penings,” Wednesday, April
at 8:30 p.m. in Baird Hall.

13

The concert will consist entire-

ly of premiere performances, including those of Julie and Gretchen, a programmatic composition
about toyland by Emmanuel Sinderbrand; Visions IV, a film with
music by M. Horwood; Readings
from Henry Miller with chance

musical interpretation from an Indian nursery-theme by P. Harjikakou: and Two Part Inventions, a
chance fusion of Bach's “Inventions” arranged by SinderbrandHadjikakou. The featured performance of the concert is Patagonian Apparations by Eligha Cohent of Yale University. Tanka,
by J. Bergamo, and Invention in
the Style of Bach will also be
performed.

Admission is free to the public.

Ewell Discusses Food Problems
Vice-president for Research Dr.
Raymond Ewell will discuss “The
World Food-Population Problem”
April 13 at the Towne House Motel at 12:15 p.m.

Dr. Ewell’s lecture is part of a
series of “Meet-the-Professor”
luncheons sponsored by the UB

alumni.

Aid Expenditures and the House
Committee on Agriculture.
Dr. Ewell is former assistant
director of the National Science
Foundation and the author of
publications in the fields of chemistry, engineering, economics, and
Soviet science and education.
Reservations can be made for
$1.75 at the Alumni Office, 8314121.

Dr. Ewell is also professor of
chemistry and engineering. He
has served as an economic consultant to the governments of
India and the Philippines, the
United Nations’ Centre for International Development and the
United States’ Agency for International Development.
The problems of an exploding
world population were recently
presented by Dr. Ewell to the
Senate Subcommittee on Foreign

Paris Belts. Each has a
style as individual as
the rocking beat of Jay
and The Americans'
new album,
“Sunday and Me”.

Religion on Campus
INTER-VARSITY

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP

For information and transportation for the Western New York
Regional Conference of IVCF to
be held April 15 to 17, contact
Billie Knapp at 835-2048.
NEWMAN
On Wednesday, April 13, New-

man Hall will attend "A Dialo-

the Death of God” in
the Conference Theatre at 7 p.m.
Reservations for the Empire
State Province Convention in
Troy, New York must be made
by April 13. For information call
834-3504. There will be no Sunday Suppers this week or next,
April 10 or 17.
gue on

ATTENTION

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The MIGLIORE INSURANCE
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The Paris Competition
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Pizza
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The Paris Cinch Ring
Buckle Belt. Stitched
shrunken steerhide.
Black or brown. $4.00
The Paris Paisley Belt.
A wild splash of color
in tune with Spring. $3.
When you wear a
Paris Belt, you show
people who's boss.

99( for Big
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13"

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KENMORE, N. Y.

FREE SODA

these campus stores

THE TKAIMTIOXAL SHOP
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�SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Undergraduates,
University and

Research
This is the first article in a series on Research and the University. Us object is to inform. Perhaps more important it seeks
to provoke comment. The Spectrum will welcome contributions
long or short from faculty, students, and staff on the topic of research.
Please send articles, typed if possible, to Russell Goldberg, Spectrum,
Norton Hall. Please include name and telephone number.

■ai

Tuesday, April 12, 1966

BpM

m\

B

■^Siv

For better or worse the community of scholars is

undergoing a change. Education of undergraduates is
no longer the over riding concern. The university is no
longer a decorative ivory tower; adornment afforded by

an affluent society. Rather it forms the foundation of
modern industrial civilization. As such it is perhaps
brutalized, clearly more necessary, and definitely

changed.

“The American university is currently undergoing
its second great change,” said Clark Kerr in his book
The Uses of the University. “So many of the hopes and
fears of the American people are now related to our
educational system and particularly to our universities—the hope for longer life, for getting into outer space,
for a higher standard of living; our fears of Russian or
Chinese supremacy, of the bomb and annihilation, of
individual loss of purpose in the changing world. For
all these reasons and others, the university has become
a prime instrument of national purpose. This is new.
This is the essence of the transformation now engulfing
our universities. Recent changes in the American university have done them (undergraduate students) little
good—lower teaching loads for the faculty, larger classes,
the use of substitute teachers for the regular faculty, the
choice of faculty members based on research accomplishments rather than instructional capacity, the fragmentation of knowledge into endless subdivisions.”

s ■'sSE
■■

The undergraduate has diminishing importance
One of the reasons for the deemphasis of the under-

An introduction to one of the committee’s working
papers published last June outlined the problem as
The amount paid by undergraduates for tuition and follows:
fees is also on the rise, but it has not kept pace with
costs. Income from such sources, despite higher enrollOf the $15 billion being spent for Federal research
ments, increased only 25 percent between 1 ‘&gt;62 and 1964. and development, $2 billion is spent directly in the
The undergraduate is paying for a smaller portion of the Nation’s universities.
cost of his education then he used to.
There has been increasing concern that these FedBalance sheets and the finance officers which mould eral expenditures have diminished the dedication of
them are notoriously practical. When one type of in- college teachers to their calling; have diverted professors
come lags behind expenses another source of revenue away from teaching into research; have benefited a
must be found to take up the slack if the university is relatively small number of the Nation’s ranking univerto continue its life and growth.
sities at the expense of the rest of the higher education
system; have strengthened graduate education with no
Into
breech steps the federal government with corresponding assistance to undergraduate instruction;
aid for research. Grants in excess of one and three and have helped limited areas of the natural and physical
quarter billion dollars were given to institutions of higher sciences, thus creating imbalances in the structure of
learning in 1963-64. An increase of 40 percent over aid higher education.
1961-62. The research professor becomes the big man
Research is done by scientists. The teaching of
on campus. The grant and how to acquire it becomes a
scince is also done by scientists. The burden of the
way of life.
complaint has been that there are not enough good
Clark Kerr comments, “at the undergraduate level scientists to do enough of both. Students have protested
the ‘subtle discounting of the teaching process’ has been by campus demonstrations that they cannot have contact
aided and abetted (by research). Harold Orlans, who with experienced professors, either in or out of the classconducted the excellent Brookings study of federal aid room. They complain that they are being taught by
graduate students,
to universities, concludes that federal
research aid ‘has completing their themselves as much concerned with
own studies as with teaching underaccelerated the longe-standing depreciation of undergradgraduates; and not the best graduates, because the best
uate education at large universities.’
ones are themselves involved in research.
"There seems to be a ‘point of no return’ after which
The Research and Technical Programs Subcommitresearch, consulting, graduate instruction become so
tee
has
therefore undertaken to investigate these quesabsorbing that faculty efforts, can no longer be concentrated on undergraduate instruction as they once were. tions.
This process has been going on for a long time; federal
The
specificly solicited comments from
research funds have intensified it. As a consequence, some 300 committee
“thoughtful persons in the educational and
undergraduate education in the large university is
more scientific communities.” One of the areas of concern
likely to be acceptable than outstanding: educational
was undergraduate education. As a general question to
policy from the undergraduate point of view is
lanrelv provoke thought and evoke reaction these distinguished
neglected.”
gentlemen were asked “Is undergraduate education suffrom overemphasis on research? It has been
fering
The Eighty-ninth Congress became concerned with charged that
teaching is left more and more to inexperithe effect of federal grants were having on
education. enced instructors or second-rate graduate students, beThe Research and Technical Programs Subcommittee cause
talented professors and superior graduates find
was directed to investigate the “conflicts between the research
more rewarding than teaching.”
federal research programs and the nations goals for
higher education.”
Their replies were varied:
*

Excerpts
Dr. J. Peterson Eld
Harvard Univei
I think from my o
valid and genuine,
which I suppose con
college, whereby seni
do a good deal of i
much deserve praise
by habit this is the
say as much for the
senior professors in f
graduate instruction
As for second-rate
danger here and in a
to attract our very 1
instruction and to gi
ing. The very fact
ever, shows that we
we were negligent.

’

is chaired by

Dr. JacqndpBarzun
It is perfectly tru
graduates is sufferin
in the classroom. 1
it antedates Goven
the shortage of ma
are numerous and c
instead of older mei
What has worsen*
not merely scientific
research by itself, hi
publication in print
the invisible researc
of mouth to his stuc
producing in that it
Dr. Robert
versify

Presthm

From exugrience
would say "t unde
definitely suffering fr
dates and younger, le
however, is due to t
search and Publicati
talented professors f0
tion ot profilers’ tiro
even those professors
with the students as
about one-fourth of i

i

is going to get worse before it gets better.

The Research and Technical Programs SubcommitHenry S. Reuss (D) of Wisconsin. It
is a subsidiary of the House Committee on Governmental
Operations which is headed by William L. Dawson (D.)
of Illinois.

tee

presumably free to
teaching their primal

i

graduate is economic. The cost of maintaining an institution of higher education is skyrocketing. Mushrooming enrollment, increased capital costs and higher
wage demands conspire to give finance officials nightmares. U.S. Office of Education statistics point to a 30
percent rise in the cost of maintaining an on going university between 1061-62 and 1063-64. And the problem

�/

■•

’

.f-&gt;

i

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, April 12, 1966

1 1966

|[rlr

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;

'■;.

‘

■

.

■

.■

'

;

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.

PAGE FIVE

.,

-

.•■-

_j:~^

'

K“;i' vi
31. i_l
Excerpts
Dr. J. Peterson Elder, Dean, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences,
Harvard University
I think from my own observations that the fears expressed here are
valid and genuine. At Harvard we have, thank heaven, a trad.tion
which I suppose comes down from a small New England liberal arts
college, whereby senior professors in the social sciences and humanities
do a good deal of undergraduate instruction. I don’t think we so
much deserve praise here as we should be grateful for the fact that
by habit this is the way we do things. I doubt, however, that I can
say as much for the natural sciences here, though again it is true that
senior professors in all the major fields in the sciences do give undergraduate instruction.
As for second-rate graduate students, we have long ago realized the
danger here and in a number of ways we have worked very hard, both
to attract our very best graduate students to assist in undergraduate
instruction and to give them, albeit informally, counseling and training. The very fact that we consider this matter so important, however, shows that we fear that we should have grave problems here if
we were negligent.
Dr. JacqudJBarzun, Provost, Columbia University
It is perfectly true that in some institutions the teaching of undergraduates is suffering from the use of inexperienced graduate students
in the classroom. But this deplorable system of staffing is not new;
it antedates Government-sponsored research, and its causes lie in
the shortage of manpower or money or both. Graduate students
are numerous and come cheap; it is therefore tempting to use them
instead of older men with higher degrees and ranks.
What has worsened a bad practice is the new frenzy for research
not merely scientific research, and certainly not Government-sponsored
research by itself, but the doctrine that whereas research followed by
publication in print is important, and noble, and status producing
the invisible research of the scholar-teacher who publishes by word
of mouth to his students is inferior, unworthy of reward, and burden
producing in that it fosters contact with students.
—

Dr. Robert Presthns, Professor of Political Science, Cornell University

From exjgience at four large State and private universities, I
would say mat undergraduate education at the larger institutions is
definitely suffering from the delegation of teaching to doctoral candidates and younger, less-experienced faculty members. This condition,
however, is due to the fact that universities achieve prestige by research and Publication, as well as to the preferences of the most
talented professors for research. It should be added that the dissipation of proffers’ time in committee work and ceremonials means that
even those professors who mainly teach do not spend as much time
with the students as one might assume. It is generally true that
about one-fourth of a faculty engages in research, while the rest are
presumably' free to each, yet they do not and .often cannot make
teaching ttieir primary responsibility.

Dr. Ralph W. Pfouts, Chairman, Department of Economics, University
of North Carolina
I do not believe undergraduate education is suffering from overemphasis on research in the universities. I believe these charges
arise from a misunderstanding of the nature of the education process.
Education and research are completely compatible operations, in my
view, and both activities should be undertaken by a university worthy
of the name. I believe that research is just as important a function of
It is a mistake to
a university as is education in the narrow sense.
secondary eduas
and
primary
the
same
light
of
think universities in
is broader and
cational institutions. Their function is different andadvancement
of
their responsibility is correspondingly greater. The
knowledge through research is just as important as is the inculcation
of knowledge in the young. Without the advancement of knowledge,
education in the narrow sense would surely become stagnant and
would not provide the intellectual stimulation that is needed and I
believe, craved by students.
In short, 1 believe that in the past there may have been far too
much emphasis on education in the narrow sense in American universities. I do not view emphasis on research as antisocial; nor do I
believe that more and more inexperienced instructors and second-rate
graduate students are being used to teach undergraduates. The
faculty member to be effective as an instructor almost invariably
should be effective as a researcher. Otherwise he runs the danger of
his knowledge becoming obsolete. I do not think it is satisfactory for
appropriate books,
a faculty member to merely “keep up” by reading
first
the
in
place this is not
think
I
publications.
and
other
journals,
actually done by people who are not engaged in research or in many
instances the reading is of a superficial nature and the material is not
way
taken and incorporated into courses. I believe that the surest
engages
to obtain an alert and enlighted faculty is to have one that
in research. The faculty member who both teaches and researches
finds himself in the midst of a struggle to advance knowledge, and he
that
becomes aware of the changing nature of knowledge in a way come
is not possible if he is not engaged in research. The changes
home to him emotionally and become a part of his psychology; they
are not merely recognized in an intellectual way. I believe that what
has occurred is a more conscious attempt by American universities
to have a balanced faculty, one which engages effectively in both
research and in classroom and laboratory instruction, and I personally
regard this as a highly desirable state of affairs. It seems to me unfortunate to attempt to hang the recent difficulties in Berkley on the
fact that the Berkley faculty, generally speaking, is a good research
faculty. I think that people who have made this charge have not
really thought through the statements they are making or they are
speaking from a prejudiced viewpoint.
\sMt*"iuut|y tmpioy«r. M

4F

�Tuesday, April 12, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Mary Anthony Dance Group to Perform
The Mary Anthony Dance
Theater will present a performance of modern dance Saturday
(April 16) at 8:30 p.m. in Baird
Recital Hall at the State University at Buffalo.
Sponsored by the Union Board
Dance Committee, the performance will include “Threnody," a
dance choreographed by Mary

Anthony and inspired by John
M. Synge’s tragedy, “Riders to
the Sea.” The score was composed especially for the dance
by opera composer Benjamin

Britton.
Anthony Chujoy, of “Dance
News,” described “Threnody” as
telling “the age old story of
the crel sea demanding its vie-

BIRTH CONTROL

(Cont'd from

P. 1)
or gives away or offers to lend
or give away” birth control information or devices is guilty of
a misdemeanor.
Charges against Baird were dismissed in November after the law
was changed in September. According to New York State Senator William C. Thompson it was
Baird's arrest that lead to the
passage of an amendment permitting sale of contraceptives to
persons over 16.
On November 19, Baird and 25
members of the Parents Aid Society picketed Nassau County operated Meadowbrook Hospital for
refusal to give out birth control
information to the poor. At the
time hospital policy was to refer
any patient requesting such information to his family physician.
Those who could not afford a
physician were directed to the
Welfare Department.
The following month Baird and
18 supporters picketed the office
of the Nassau County Health Commissioner for refusal to give birth
control information to the poor.
Baird explained, “What we want
to do is coordinate our efforts
with existing agencies. We don’t
have the facilities or the money
to be able to do what the agencies can do and they should take
on much of the responsibility.”
The Parents Aid Society opened
its own clinic in Hempstead this
year. Licensed volunteer physi-

cians consult with and examine
patients and dispense contraceptives to the poor at no cost. The
clinic, Baird explained, is geared
to the needs of the poor. When
necessary, he said, the
mobile

...

van picks up the mother and her
children and brings them to the

clinic. While she is examined,
volunteers supervise the children.
The clinic opens early in the
morning and remains open late
to accommodate working parents.
Since the opening of the clinic
Baird has expanded his efforts
to inform the public of the need
for adequate information on birth
control. He has lectured on radio,
television, and to adult audiences
and has spoken to student groups.
Baird believes that students
should be better informed about
birth control. While he maintains
that sexual relations should be
reserved for marriage, he claims
that many students “misconceptions lead to conceptions,” Among
married students, he said, unwanted pregnancy often results in
one or both partners dropping out
of school or in complete change
of career plans.
A student organization, the Parents Aid Club, believed by Baird
to be the first of its kind, was
started at Hofstra University by
Douglas Wilcox who first became
interested in birth control while
he and several other students
were working at the Parents Aid
Society Clinic. According to Wilcox, in addition to informing students about various methods of
contraception the club will encourage students to join in educational campaigns to teach the
poor about birth control.
Baird said that similar organizations are now being formed at
Adelphi University, Nasau Community College, Princeton University, Brooklyn and Queens Colleges.

tims and

the

tragedy

of the

women left behind. ‘Threnody’

is presented in a dance languof stark simplicity which
strengthens the exposition of the
story. The economy of movement
here practiced by the choreographer is admirable.”

age

Miss Anthony has served as
choreographer for the religious
television series “Lamp Unto My
Feet” and “Look Up and Live.”
She has choreographed a succession of Italian musicals in
Rome, as well as an Italian weekly television “Canzonissima.”
The Mary Anthony Dance
Theater has apeared at the leading American dance festivals in
Connecticut, at Jacob’s Pillow,
Massachusetts, and New York

City.

AID Summer Project
Seeks Grad Students
Forty male graduate students,
preferably in the social sciences,
will have an opportunity to serve
in a civilian capacity in either
Vietnam or Laos this summer
through a project authorized by
the Agency for International Development (AID) and administered by the Institute of Internation-

al Education.
Richard B, Myer of the Institute
International Education explained that the project is being
developed to assist Vietnam and
Laos in improving the capacity
and effectiveness of their programs at the provincial level in
such fields as rural reconstruction, refugee assistance, supply
distribution artd community deof

velopment.
Thirty volunteers will be assigned to Vietnam and ten to
Laos. Each participating institution will be assigned a quota of
candidates.

in Student
Guild's production of Tennessee Williams' "At Liberty."

Russ Battaglia, Susan Kaplan, and Fay Dattnar appear

Theatre

One-Act Plays Presented
In Millard-Fillmore Room
Two one-act plays, Tennessee
William’s “At Liberty” and UB
Drama and Speech Professor William Coleman’s ‘Smythe” will be
presented by the Student Theatre Guild April 13-16 at 8:30 in
the Fillmore Room.
Director Susan Abrams describ-

ed “At Liberty” as the story of
an ex-actress who is suffering
from tuberculosis but who re-

fuses to slow down her

fast-

paced life. Fay Dattner will play

the role of the mother.
Francine Zumpano, who app e a r e d in Oh Dad, Poor Dad
earlier this year, will direct
“Smythe.” Members of the cast
include Leonard Horowitz, Sandi Klein, Lebert Puma, Anne Selman and Robin Herniman.
Students will be admitted free,
but tickets must be secured prior
to the performance. General admission is $1.00.

"Talking Painting" Heard on WBFO
WBFO will present an art pro18, 21, 25, and 28 on
“Talking Painting,” the first in
an experimental series of radio
programming known as “radiovision.”
gram April

Listeners will look at painting
inserted in the
WBFO program guide while hearing a discussion of the works by
the student artist, students, and
reproductions

professors.

William A. Penn, a UB graduate assistant in music, has com-

an original music score
with brass and percussion instruments to compliment the works.

posed

The series, recorded in the art
studios of UB professors John
Mclvor and Willard Harris, will
be broadcast Mondays at 7:30
p.m. and rebroadcast Wednesdays
at 4 p.m
Copies of the April program
guide are available in the dormitories, Norton Union, and WBFO
station, 3435 Main St.

Weekly Calendar
Lecture: “Leisure and Creativity,” Leonard Port and Dr. Robert Rossburg, Faculty Lounge,
3:30 p.m.
Lecture: “Masterpieces from the
Montreal Museum of Fine Arts”
Albright-Knox Gallery
8:30 p.m. through April 16.
Wednesday:
Eulogy: “A Dialogue on the Death

of God," Father Francis Keat-

ing, St, Peter’s College, Con-

ference Theatre, 7 p.m.
Lecture: "The World Food-Population Problem,” Dr. Raymond
Ewell, Town House Motel, 12:15
p.m.

Seminar: “Recent Structural Advances in Organometallic Complexes,” Dr. Lawrence Dahl

Acheson, A-70, 4:30 p.m.

Play*: “At Liberty” and “Smythe”
Student Theatre Guild
Concert: Alexander Schneider and
Peter Serkin. Albright-Knox,
8:30 p.m., Millard Fillmore Rm.

Thursday:

Lecture: “Changes in Settlement
Patterns Among Indian Groups
in Western New York,” Dr.
Marian E. White, Capen G-22,
8 p.m.

Lecture: “Negro Leadership; Mar-

tin Luther King and Frederick
Douglas,’ Professor Herbert G.
Stony, Faculty Club, 8:30 p.m.
Play: “You Can’t Take it with
You,” opens Studio Arena Theatre
Friday

Recital: Alexander Schneider of
the Budapest String Quartet,
Albright-Knox Gallery Auditorium, 8:30 p.m.

—VOLUNTEERS—
Volunteers are needed
to take the Student Attitudes Test at the Senate
Office, 205 Norton.

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April 12-15
Tuesday:

�Tuesday, April 12, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

History of Attitudes of War Shows Changes Furnas Scholarship Fund Is Success;
By DAVE KNOKE
(CPS) While it may be axiomatic that human nature changes
little over the centuries, one very
notable exception is the manner
in which men wage, war nowadays. Granted, the sophistication
of weapons and tactics have considerably changed since Neanderthalean brainbashes were the
most effective way of doing your
neighbor in.

This is not the point; technol-

ogy has always made gruesome

advances in killing techniques
while the morality that guides
men to use these has remained
relatively static.
What is most startling in reviewing the long and colorful
history of mankind’s war is the
realization that war is suddenly
being fought by men with entirely different attitudes from those
held just a few short centuries
ago. The plain fact seems to be
that men no longer enjoy massacring each other; war is being
waged out of inertia.
Time was when the common
foot soldier had an immediate,
personal stake in marching down
the paths of glory; today he has
been reduced to the mundane
role of cannon fodder.
Back in the good ol’ days (al-

ways idealized best by those who

never lived then) when a man
could take the law in his own
hands, fighting was down-right
run. Rape, torture, pillage, looting, gluttony, drunkness the enlistee’s life was one eternal round
of glorious entertainment.
-

The Teutonic war bands enjoyed 'the physical pleasure of
fighting so much that, if the chief
could not think up an ideological
dispute to start a war, the tribes
held a sort of Super Bacchanalia.
The mob would gather on the
opposite sides of some verdant
spring meadow, and, with a super
abundance of strutting, cursing,
caterwalling and other sorts of
bravura, would run toward each
other at top speed. Pairing off,
they would swing their war clubs,
brandish their spears and shields
and begin pounding away without finesse, taking care not to
hit any vital spots. During a daylight span, the armies would flail
away at each other in concentrated earnestness, on the whole
achieving at day’s end nothing
more than a relaxing exhaustion
and a hearty appetite.
This ancient and noble custom
has gone into oblivion, as today’s
soldiers unimaginatively attempt
to knock each other’s blocks off
without displaying a modicum of
theatrical talent.
No longer do soldiers from dif-

ferent armies fraternize when
they pause from battle; this an-

cient courtesy of the fighting man
toward his foe saw its last gasp
in the winter of 1914 when German and Russian troops took
time out to celebrate Christmas
together on the Eastern front.
Once upon a time the army was
a profession every young man
lusted after; there was no need
of a draft with a surfeit of volunteers and wars were genetical-

THE SPECTRUM
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sharply curtailed by stodgy top
brass, all the fun went out of
the soldier’s life. Mass butchery
A $100,000 fund drive to estabecame the property of arm-chair
generals who designed genocide blish the “C. C. Furnas Scholarprograms with a minimum of shop Fund” has passed the
waste and excitement.
$60,000 mark, according to Fund
So instead of warring for perand
prestige, the foot Committee Chairman Whitworth
sonal gain
soldier had to start thinking in Ferguson.
ideological terms of National InAlumni, corporations, and interest. Home, God, and Country
as prix de la guerre. Rather poor dividuals planning to contribute
fare for the nasty business they are requested by Mr. Ferguson to
do, but everyone is told that "This
man’s army ain’t never had it so send their checks to the UB
Foundation, Inc., “so that the
good."
NOTE: Knoke is a staff writer for fund will be able to provide
the Michigan Daily.

tall man. No wonder the French
a nation of midgets after
World War I.
Another dirty trick played on
the common soldier was the invention of the rules of war. When
restriction started being put on
the' treatment of prisoners and
when extracurricular rapine was

were

Tf Wlf| j

scholarship funds to talented
young men and women at UB.”

A testimonial dinner will be
held to honor Dr. Furnas lor
his twelve years of service to the
university and the Niagara Frontier April 19, at the Statler Hilton. The total amount raised for
the scholarship fund will be announced at the dinner and a
scroll of contributors will be
presented to Dr. Furnas.

LATE NEWS
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Testimonial Dinner Slated April 19

ly selective. The best fighters
were the ones who went home to
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Sadly, the battlefield as a proving ground of manhood began to
disappear with the invention of
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�Government Asserts That
Hallucenogens May Be
Harmful To Students
By ROBERT B. SEMPLE, JR.
Special to the New York Times
Washington, April 5
The Federal Government today
stepped into the growing controversy over the use of hallucinatory drugs on college campuses.
—

agency and

the nation’s educational institutions. It was
prompted, officials said, by growing evidence that colleges arid
universities have become centers
of illicit use of the drugs.

Confederated Student Government Discusses
F.S.A. Guidelines At Albany Conference
Buffalo
State
Confederated
Student Government (CSG) President Alan Latona represented the
CSG. April 28 and 29 in Albany.

CSG is an organization of state
universities which confers with
state administration authorities
on student government autonomy,
control of student monies and
student traffic control.
State University President Samuel Gould and other Faculty-Student Association and State University representatives were also
present at the Conference.
Mr. Latona mentioned that the
“most significant question discussed was the status of the proposed FSA guidelines.”
Also examined were budget

In a stern letter to officials of
more than 2,000 colleges and
universities. Dr. James Goddard,
Commissioner of the Food and
Drug Administration, noted a
marked increase in the illegal
use of such drugs and said that
“concerted action” must be taken.

administrators, heads of science
departments and other officials.
The letter pointed out that of
all the drugs, LSD-25 presented
the greatest threat and was dangerous in
exceedingly small

—COMMITTEES—
A 11 applications for
Union Board Activities
offices must be returned
to 215 Norton by April
12. Elections will be held
April 14. Candidates are
invited to a cofffee hour
April 12 in the Charles
Room at 7:30 p.m.

Otherwise, he warned, “an untold number of our students may
suffer permanent mental or physical injury.”

The drug is a “consciousnessexpanding”
chemioal-D-Iysergio
acid diethylamide-—that totally
rearranges the senses, producing
weird and extraordinary mental

—NSA—
Election of delegates
to the National Congress
of NSA will be held
Wednesday, April 25.

As little as 100 micrograms can
produce hallucinations lasting for
hours or days. One gram— a fraction of an ounce—can provide
10,000 doses. A few pounds
dumped into a city’s water supply, it is said, could disorient the
entire population.

—CORRECTION—
The Skanks will play
Sigma Alpha Mu on
WKBW-TV April 18 in
a Trivia Tournament to
be taped April 15 at
WKBW at 8. Free tickets for the taping may
be obtained at the Norton Ticket Office.

“There is

direct evidence of
widespread availability of a number of drugs which have profound effects on the mental processes,” Dr. Goddard said. “Both
students and members of the
faculty are being secretly approached to engage in halluconogenic ‘experiences'.”

As a partial remedy to what he
called “a most hazardous situation," Dr Goddard urged campus
officials to report immediately to
K.D.A. district offices instances
of illegal use or possession of
any of the hallucinatory or sleepdelaying drugs, such as the

amphetamines.
Pointing out that some of the
particularly LSD-25
drugs
could be easily maufacturcd in
college chemistry laboratories,
Dr, Goddard also suggested that
colleges might wish to take other
’ appropriate" actions, such as inspection programs, laboratory supervision or special counseling.
—

The Food and Drug Administration has been growing increasingly concerned about the illicit
use of LSD and other drugs. Under Federal law, the sale or
manufacture of LSD is a misdemeanor.
Several months ago the agency
started a major attack on illegal
traffic in amphetamines, barbiturates, LSD-25 and other potentially
dangerous drugs. To support this
attack, the agency's new Bureau
of Drug Abuse Control opened
five regional offices yesterday.
Dr. Goddard's letter was the
first communication between the

The letter was sent to deans of
men and women, campus housing

abberrations.

The other two drugs mentioned
in Dr. Goddard’s letter were
psilocybin and mescaline, which
produce many of the same effects
caused by LSD-25 but are much
more difficult to produce. Psilocybin is an extract from a Mexican
mushroom, and mescaline is an
extract from the small cactus,
peyote.

Dr. Goddard mentioned no statistics to support his contention
that the use of the drugs has
jumped sharply in recent months.
An agency spokesman said that
statistics would be meaningless
inasmuch as the use of the drug§
largely clandestine and,
was
furthermore, was growing so fast
that any figures and today would
be outdated tomorrow.

Officials of the Food and Drug
Administration said that it was
no secret that some students had
been experimenting with LSD-25.
The purpose of Dr. Goddard’s
letter, they said, was not simply
to restate the acknowledged fact
but to let college officials know
the depth of the government’s
concern and to suggest new ways
of policing the manufacture of
the drugs.
@

1966

by the New York Timet
Reprinted by permission.

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supports for student needs and
facilities, the possibility of assuming the cost of athletics, and
the SUNY summer Leadership
Workshop with Dr. Gould and
members of the central administration.

All schools have been invited
by Mr. Latona to send delegates
to a full report of the meetings
April 22-23 at Fredonia. For details contact, Alan Latona, Confederated Student Governments,
State University College at Buffalo, 1300 Elmwood Ave., Buffalo,

New York.

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Proof:

Tuesday, April 12, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

SPECIAL

IF 7-6120

Special peed Tuesday H Friday

—INFORMAL TALK—
Dean Richard Siggelkow and Political Science Professor Richard
Cox will speak on “The
Mechanisms of a University” Wednesday, April
13, at 3 p.m. in the Haas
Lounge. Students and
faculty are welcome.
—VOLUNTEERS—
Volunteers are needed
to take the Student Attitudes Test at the Senate
Office, 205 Norton.

Co.

—SCHNEIDER—
Violinist Alexa n d e r
Schneider, a member of
the UB Budapest String
Quartet, will present a
sonata recital April 15
and 17 in the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. Tickets may be purchased for
$2.50 at Baird Hall ticket office.

—KATTAN—
Dr. Naim Rattan, noted
ed editor and critic in
Montreal, will speak in
French on “The Quiet
Cultural and Literary
Revolution in French
Canada” April 14 at
8:30 p.m. in 335 Norton.
—PUFFER—
Dr. Claude E. Puffer,
vice president for business affairs, has been
elected to a one-year
term as president of the
Association o f Business
Officers of the State University of New York.
-

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By SCOTT FORMAN

—KEATING—
The Reverend Father
Francis Keating will discuss “The Issues at
Stake” in the final lecture of the “Dialogue on
the Death of God” series
April 13 in the Conference Theater at 7 p.m.

'

When you’re brought up in
New York City, baseball usually
plays a crucial role in your learnprocess if you’re not going to
turn into a streetfighter. I know
this is the way it was with me
—since I can remember, baseball
had always played a definite role
in my life as I grew up on the
streets of The Bronx. This attachment to the national pasttime alone was not enough—there of course had to be an idol

to

go along.

During thes years X think it
is safe to say that more of us
kids idolized Mickey Mantle than
any other baseball star of that
day and age. And just as some
people still idolize Babe Ruth,
I feel that all of us still should
idolize Mr. Mantle. However,
this “hero worship” should take
on a new perspective, and one
must be able to grasp this important difference if we are to
cease living in a fantasy land
of the past.

When I was very small my
father would often come home
early from work and take me
on the “D” train to the Polo
Grounds to see the old New York
Giants play a somewhat inept
brand of baseball. My father loved to watch Willie Mays play,
and he still does. Yet I was
watching a losing team (except
in 1954)—and somehow Lackman,
Williams, Dark, Thompson, Mueller, Sauer, St. Claire, and Antonelli didn’t quite match up
to my own team in The Bronx.

The Yankees were winning—and had been for years. I was
just too young to root for an
underdog like the Giants, especially since all my friends
were Yankee fans. When we
chose up sides to play punchball, curbball, slapball, or stickball, we all wanted to pretend
to be a different Yankee player.
Mantle wqs the most desired
choice, what with the ability
to slam home runs, steal bases,
make fantastic catches, and blow
bubbles while playing centerfield. Yet the local bully always
wanted to be Mickey also. So in
the end I found myself being
Hank Bauer instead.
Of course my heart remained
with the Mick. At World Series
time I would rush home from
school to turn on the television
set and catch the last few innings of the game. And always
my heart would beat a little
faster when that big number
seven was at the plate. Mantle
in my eyes could do no wrong—
when he struck out it was in
a blaze of glory, and when he
made an occasional error, the
sun was in his eyes (as Mel
Allen said). When we flipped
trading cards against the apart-

would

always be Mantle—providing of course that he was a

double.

In 1956 Mickey Mantle represented what I thought was the
greatest ballplayer who ever
lived. He won the triple crown
that year and played the entire
season free from injuries. Yet
as Mantle was later beset by
various ailments, I continued to
maintain that he was unsurpassed in the anals of baseball history. The fact that Mickey wasn’t
playing as well as in 1956 did
not really bother me—as long as
he still struck out with power
and still blasted home runs was
enough to keep my loyalties intact. In fact, I reasoned, it just
proved that he didn’t need all
that speed anyway. And when
Mantle did something spectacular, like almost hitting a ball
out of Yankee Stadium in fair
territory, I would spend several
days thinking and talking about
that feat.
Indeed today I can recall well
the most remarkable of Mickey’s
achievements. Yet this is the
old picture of an idol who played an all-important role in a life
which was carefree and untroubled.

I don’t think that this old

conception of Mantle ever came
to an end at a specific time—it was a gradual realization as I
grew older and no longer ran
to hide the stick from the cops.
Don’t get me wrong—Mickey
Mantle is still an idol and always will be—but he is no longthe infallible god and symbol of

greatness of baseball. He is
rather the picture of a professional athlete who, although no
longer the best in his field, certainly is the most courageous. He
is the picture of a man trying
to maintain an image which the
public holds of him as a superman. And I think most of all,
he is the picture of a man who
is trying not to break the hearts
of millions of kids who still hold
the first conception of him by
displaying his fallibility.
Of course Mantle at the same
time is undoubtedly trying to
prove his ability to himself. Mr.
Mantle is indeed an idol for the
kids growing up on the streets
of the Bronx who still maintain
that he is the greatest baseball
player in the game today (and
many still do).

Yet what I think is now equally important is that Mickey Man

tie represent to adults how courenabled a near-cripple
to play better baseball than the
average major leaguer for the
past four years. And perhaps the
most significant aspect of all
is that the kids in The Bronx,
in time, give up their old idol
Mickey Mantle for the more imporUnt real-life version of the
age has

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&lt;

-

'i

—

■—

DISCOUNT

VOLUME 16

J

1““""^

m

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT

NSA

BUFFALO

MW

SMlHHi

BUFFALO. NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1966

SCOUTING
REPORT
(See Pages 1(M1)

NO. 35

Deveaux Sends Telegram to Senator Brydges;
Seeks Discussion On Campus Demonstrations
Student Senate President Clinton Deveaux sent a telegram to
State Senate Majority leader Earl
Brydges April 4 inviting him to
an informal discussion with student leaders. Senator Brydges has
called for an investigation of demonstrations on State University
campuses against the war in Viet
Nam and the use of State University at Buffalo press office to

IRC Officer Candidates: I to r front; Judy Snydor and Sharon Sholman, secretarial candidates. Rear: Alan Fried and Steve Sickler, vicepresident; Alan Sturti, treasurer; Joel Feinman and Larry Pivnick,
president.

IRC Elections For Officers
To Be Held April 14 and IS
Inter-Bestidence Council elec-

tions for President,. Vice-president, Secretary and Treasurer
will take place Thursday and
Friday, April 14 and 15.
For the first time in an IRC
election, voting machines will
be used. According to election
committee chairman Joel Gershowitz, three polling places will be
set up
Tower, Goodyear, and
the Allenhurst Lounge in Good—

year.

The election committee has an-

nounced plans to schedule a public debate among the officer candidates during the campaign. Arrangements are being made to
tape and rebroadcast the debate
to the dorms.
The four IRC officers are elected in a general election in the
spring to take office at the beginning of the fall semester. The
hall representatives are elected
with the various hall officers in
the fall.

circulate material for one protest group.
Mr. Deveaux said that he hopes
through discussion both students
and the senator would gain a
clearer understanding of the facts
involved.
According to a spokesman for
the State University of New York,
“the conduct of affairs is largely
the responsibility of the President of that campus and it is up
to him to exercise judgments concerning these affairs.” He added
that this principle of “local control” has long been State University policy.
The spokesman added that utilization of campus public relations
office is also under the jurisdiction of the local president. He
noted that State University of
New York at Buffalo’s policy has
been that public information services be provided for any recognized student organization, the
Students for a Democratic Society
is a recognized student organiza-

tion.
This policy was confirmed sev-

Buffalo Common Council Passes A Resolution

Against UB Anti-Vietnam War Demonstration
Earlier this week the Buffalo
Common Council, a legislative
body, passed a resolution against
anti-Vietnam war demonstrations
at the State University of New
York at Buffalo.
The resolution of the Common

Council requests that “the Presi-

dent of the State University Sys-

tern and the President of the

State University of New York at
Buffalo investigate the use of
state facilities and agencies to
conduct anti-Vietnam activities.”
The Council cited the university
publicity agency as an instance
of the use of state agencies to
conduct anti-Vietnam activities.
The vote was 12 to 1 in favor

Student Testing Service to Give
Draft Exemption Examinations
U.B. will administer the Selective Service College Qualification
Test on May 21 from 12:00-3:30
p.m. and on June 3 from 8:30
a.m.-12:00 and 1:00-4:30 p.m.

All students interested in tak-

ing the examination can obtain
an information bulletin and an
application card from the Student Testing Center, 316 Harriman Library. Applications must
be postmarked no later than
Saturday, April 23, 1966.

The test is intended to examine
your ability to read with understanding and to solve new problems by use of general knowledge. There are also mathematical problems designed to test your
ability to comprehend and use
numerical relationships.
The use of the Korean War
guidelines has been suggested by
Lieutenant General Hershey in
decidin deferment. This would
make eligible for the draft freshmen in the bottom half, sophomores in the bottom third, and
juniors in the bottom quarter of
their class. The test scores will
be used as additional criteria for
deferment for these students.

Undergraduates receiving a mark
of 70 and graduate students receiving a mark of 80 on the test
will also be considered for a

student deferment.

Students may register to take
the test on Saturday, May 14,
Saturday, May 21, and Friday,
June 3, at any center convenient
to them listed in the information
bulletin.

The test does not presuppose
any schooling beyond high school
preparation for college for those
who request deferments as college students. Scores on the test
alone will not determine eligibility for deferment; they will be
used by the local Selective Service boards in considering eligibility. Scores are to provide local
boards with evidence of the relative qualifications of registrants
for college study or evidence of
aptitude for continued college
work.
The test may be taken only
once. To avoid the possibility that
any unauthorized persons might
take the test, each applicant will
be fingerprinted when he reports
for the test.

of the resolution proposed by
Councilman Gus Franczyk.
In an interview with the Spectrum, Councilman Franczyk said
that what happens at the University is a reflection on the
governor of the State of New
York and the City of Buffalo.
“The main concern is the use
of state agencies, in light of the
fact that our governor has agreed
with President Johnson’s stand
and thus, anti-war activities are
a subverison of state policy.”
He continued, “the aim of the
resolution is to get a direct answer from both President Gould
and President Furnas as to the
position of their institutions on
this whole matter, to bring to
their attention these facts in case
they don’t already know it, and
to find out if this use is one
which will be allowed, i.e. supported and condoned by both

presidents.”
Although Councilman Franczyk
commented that he doesn’t know
what will be done if the resolution is condoned, he said that
he supposes the State University
President would not allow the
use of state agencies for this,
“because we and he have always
gone in accord with state policy.
Perhaps if something were done
condoning this use, then maybe
we would submit a home rule
message urging Legislature to
way

correct this, in much the
Senator Brydges advises."

Councilman Franczyk concluded, “Don't confuse this with trying to restrict Freedom of
Speech. The case is just to find
out the scope of the use of Public
Relations in all affairs and
throughout the State of New
York."

era) years ago

in a similar dispute
concerning visiting speakers on
state campuses, said the spokesman.
According to Director of Public
Information Robert McVeigh, any
judgments made by the Relations
Department are purely on a news
value basis. He said, “It is the
newspapers which make the final
judgment, not the Public Relations office.”
The Office of Public Relations
of the University Relations Department distributes press releases on university activities to various communications media.

Republican leader Brydges said
that the UB chapter of Students
for a Democratic Society used
the Public Relations Office to
inform press and radio of a weeklong demonstration against U.S.
foreign policy. Local SDS member
Daniel Katz commented that he
had merely handed in the usual
list of the organization's activities
for the week.
Senator Brydges plans to propose his investigation to the new
Joint Legislative Committee on
Higher Education which will be
formed after the State Legislature reconvenes Ajhil 18.

Interim Campus Discussed
At Thurs. Press Conference

Mr. William Doemland, director of the Office of Planning and
Development, discussed plans for
an “interim campus" at a press
conference on Thursday.
Mr. Doemland pointed out that
since, upon completion this summer of the temporary buildings

now under construction, avail-

able space on the present campus will have been exhausted.
Therefore, until the completion
of the new campus, off campus

four criteria were used: location

—proximity to the new campus
site is important; ultimate area
for development—about 300,000
square feet are needed; rent;
ultimate use of facilities—since
the university will be using the
land for only a few years, convertibility of the facilities to other
uses is important.
The site tentatively setled upon
is on Niagara Falls Boulevard
near the Powerline Expressway.
A shopping plaza, which would be

facilities will be developed.
Several departments have alconstructed simultaneously with
ready begun using rented office
the interim campus, has been
space near the university. Enproposed for part of the site.
rollment is being kept fairly
The proposed developers of the
stable until the move to the new
interim campus are the Maret
campus. However, to adequateCorp. of Pittsburgh, Pa. The site
ly provide academic facilities unis within a mile of the new camtil that move about
100,000
pus.
square feet of usable space must
The development of the inbe added each year.
terim campus will be in two
To most efficiently create this
phases. Phase I will be ready for
needed space the Office of Planuse in January 1967: Phase II
ning and Development has evalwill be completed in September
uated three sites near the new of
1967. In addition to the acacampus for use as an “interim
demic buildings, library and
c a m p u s.” Several departments food service
facilities as well
have agreed to move completely as other suport facilities will
onto the interim campus.
be provided.
Those involved are Art, AnthroA public hearing on rezoning
and
pology, Philosophy
Mathelarge portions of the proposed
matics. Although those departplaza site is scheduled for 8
ments will have all office space Monday night before the Amoff campus, most undergraduate herst Town Board,
courses will still be taught on
Mall Plans, being drawn by
this campus. Some other departIhc Los Angeles, Calif,, firm of
ments will move some of their
Victor Gruen Associates, are exfacilities to the new site.
pected to be presented at the
In evaluating the three sites,
meeting.

Holcomb Delivers Second Lecture
In Dialogue On h e Death of God'
“In the modern world there
is a loss of the sense of transcendence,” Dr. Harmon Holcomb
of the Colgate Rochester Divinity
School pointed out at a lecture

Tuesday.

This lecture was the second in
“A Dialogue on the
Death of God," co-sponsored by
the State University at Buffalo
Council of Religious Oragnizations
and the Student Senate Convocations Committee.
The kingdom of Man has arrived, he said, in which Man no
longer has religious needs. “Man
can now solve his own problems.
We create our own meanings, our
own selves. We are free."
Dr. Holcomb pointed out that
Christianity is the source of freeing man so that he may realize
that God is dead. ‘The Christian
today knowingly wills and proclaims the death of God.”
Dr. Holcomb quoted Thomas
Altizer, prominent Death of God
theologian, as sajdng, “The oria series

ginal
sovereign,
transcendent
God truly died in Christ."
“According to Altizer,” he added, “when God emptied Himself
into Christ, it was 100 per cent."
Therefore, there is no God, he
continued; God is dead.”
Dr. Holcomb further pointed
out that both Altizer and William

Hamilton, another of the foremost Death of God theologians,
incorporate within' their writings
a strong "Jesus-ological thrust.”
"For Hamilton,” he
noted,
“Christ is a place to be, and
this place is alongside your neighbor.”
emphasizes
Altizer’s
thrust
Christ as the "Word," as an "alive,

meaningful, passionate moment"
and “an active forward process
which negates it own previous
expression,” Dr. Holcomb said.

The final lecture in this series
will be delivered April 13 at
7 p.m. in the Norton Conference
Theater by Rev. Father Francis
Keating of St. Peter’s College.
Jersey City, New Jersey.

�PAGE TWO

Senator Weltner Proposes
Bill to Lower Voting Age
young people, would

By ELLEN CARDONE
A

Friday, April 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

Constitutional

amendment

to lower the national voting age
to 18 has been introduced in
Congress by Rep. Charles L. Weltner, a Georgia Democrat. In introducing the bill, Rep, Weltner
cited the growing contributions
of young people to the national
welfare and defense, adding, “A
Congress so firmly dedicated to
the principle of voting rights
should now move to extend the
franchise to these young Americans.” He reminded the House
that there are 8 million citizens
between 18 and 20, and that half
the population will soon be under
25.
The amendment would state,
“No citizen of the United States
who is 18 years of age or older
shall be denied the right to vote
by reason of age.” The measure
was introduced last June and is
now before the House Judiciary
Committee. In an interview with
the Spectrum, Rep Weltner admitted that the bill’s chances
now are “not good," but was
optimistic that a stirring-up of
national interest, especially among

enable it

to be passed.

Facing the States’ Rights question that would be raised by the
amendment, Rep. Weltner said
he is “not a big States Righter,”
but said that an amendment
would not raise the same objections as a federal law, since it
would have to be approved by
three-fourths of the state legislatures before going into effect.
Rep. Weltner’s home state of
Georgia, where the voting age
is 18, is one of four states in
which people under 21 can vote.
A bill to lower the voting age
in New York to 18 is now before
the State Legislature.
The U.S. National Student As-

sociation has been active in the
18-Year-Old Vote movement for
several years. At the National
Student Congress last summer,
a special desk to direct publicity
and lobbying was set up.
In his speech to Congress Rep.
Weltner concluded “We have placed upon these Americans the
duties of citizenship. Let us now
extend to them the most basic
right of citizenship.”

Faculty And Grad. Students Form
Committee to Deal With Draft
The newly formed Gradual?
Student-Faculty Committee on the
Selective Service (GFCSS) has af-

firmed: ‘The entire system of
student deferment is discriminatory, creates anti-intellectualism,
and isolates the most articulate
portions of society from the war
. . the student deferment must
be abolished.'’
The committee, which was organized March 31 by several
faculty members and a group of
graduate students, emphasized
that the criteria for the n-S deferment (class rank or results on
the Selective Service Test) are
not a valid measure of a student’s
intellectual capabilities or of his
potential value to society.
The GPCSS stated that the deferment test is discriminatory
because it is geared to the aptitudes most highly developed in
science students, as demonstrated
by statistics obtained from tests
given during the Korean War.
According to the GFCSS report,
students in the “hard” sciences
consistently ranked highest, while
a greater percentage of students
.

in education, agriculture, business, the arts, and the humanities

failed the exam.
The statement, issued by the
GFCSS, declares, “students have

unequal advantages resulting

from different social and economic backgrounds. Some students
have had more experience taking tests and therefore are expected to attain higher scores.
Class standings and test scores
required for deferment at the
end of an academic year, according to the plan suggested by General Hershey, is as follows:
1st year—Upper half or 70%

test score.

2nd year—-Upper two-thirds or
70% test score.
3rd year—Upper three quarters or 70% test score.
4th year—Upper fourth or 80%
test score.
Deferments for the second year
of graduate work and thereafter
are based solely on the test scores.
The GPCSS has also questioned
the whole concept of student deferment. “Since the probability
of an individual attending college
is greatly dependent on various
factors, i.e.—his financial status,
socio-economic background, etc.,
student deferment permits members of certain “classes” only to
avoid military service. Not only

is this undemocratic and unworthy of the theoretical American
tradition, but it is also resented
by many members of the nonacademic community, resulting in
increased anti-intellectualism. Sectors of the American population
who are the most politically influential in our society, the middle
and upper classes, may remain
aloof from the calamity of war.”
The committee also expressed
concern with the relationship between the University and the
Selective Service System, affirming “the military, through the
Selective Service System, is undermining the autonomy of the
University by establishing for the
University the definitive qualities
for intellectualism and intellectuals, using the coercive device
of the n-S deferment.
“D u e to excessive pressures,
many students are encouraged to
conform academically, to cheat,
and to plariagize. Fear of low

grades discourages experimentation in course work and selection.
In these instances, the Selective
Service System is destroying the
idea of the University.”
The Committee invites all faculty and graduate students to its
next meeting Thursday, April 14,

at 7:30 p.m. in Norton Union,
Room 240 to 248.

Election of Delegates &amp; Alternates
For NSA National Student Congress
Election of four delegates and
up to six alternates to the National Student Congress of the
National Sudent Association will
be held Wednesday, April 25.
Names of candidates must be submitted to Mrs. Palisano in the
Senate Office before Friday,
April 15. All full-time undergraduate, graduate, and professional
students are eligible.
The annual National Student
Congress will be held August 20
to September 1 at the University of Illinois. Two of the six
delegates will be Student Association President Clinton Deveaux
and NSA Coordinator Jeffrey Lynford.
According to Mr. Deveaux, student problems on the national
and international levels will be
discussed at the Congress.
In 1947, approximately 50 colleges formed the National Student Association. The University
of Buffalo joined the NSA in

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1948. Mr. Deveaux said that ap-

proximately 300 schools belong
to the NSA today.

Mr. Deveaux commented that
do not join the
they regard it
NSA because
as being too liberal and because
it takes stands on may issues.”
He added, “on many campuses
there is a running battle between
the Young Americans for Freedom and NSA.”
many schools

“

Students Needed for Tutoring
The Community Action Organization, an arm of the Federal
Anti-Poverty Program, is currently conducting a program of High
School Equivalency Diploma instruction for adults.
The system of instruction has
been set up by the community
itself and Federal aid will help
meet the costs of administration.
As of now there is a need for
instructors.

�&gt;

Friday, April

«,

1966

Nina Simone and The Tokens'
Scheduled for Spring Weekend
Nina Simone and “The Tokens”

are scheuled to appear in a concert during Spring Weekend,
April 28
May 1. Committee
Chairman Diane Levy has announced that a stunt night, a
semi-formal dance, and Olympic
competitions are also planned
for the weekend.
■

The schedule of events is as
follows:

Thursday, April 28:
Concert by the Laurentian
singers from St. Lawrence
University (no admission)
Stunt Night in Clark Gym; ad-

mission $.25

Friday, April 29:

All classes cancelled
Heralding parade
Spring Olympics; Grand Prix
Trike Race sponsored by
Theta Chi Fraternity
Semj
formal dance at the
Hearthstone Manor in Cheek-

NSA Announces
Addition of New
Discount System
The National Student Association (NSA) Student Discount
Service Committee has announced that NSA American Student
Discount Cards will be printed
on the back of 1966-67 student
ID cards to insure discounts at
NSA affiliated hotels, restaurants,
theaters, and merchants. Committee Chairman Martin Feinrider said that this is the first
time that NSA discount cards
have 'been included free with
ID cards’.
“The success of a discount system,” Feinrider added, “depends
on how widely it is used. We
hope that since every student
will have a discount card, he
will make use of it at home and
traveling.”

towaga; tickets at $3.00 per

couple on sale April 11

Saturday, April 30:
Concert featuring Nina Simone and “The Tokens” in
Clark Gym; admission $1.50
Trophies and awards presented at concert
Sunday, May 1:
Lawn concert presented by UB
band

Fireworks

display

by

Hall

Tower

NSA Coordinator Jeff Lynford
commented, “I hope the students
of the university will appreciate
not only the value of the discount
system, but also all the other
services of the NSA Committee.”

New H&gt; cards will be issued by
the beginning of the fall semester, assured Mr. Feinrider.

Applications Available For Election
Of University Union Activities Board
The recently formed University
Union Activities
Board
(UUAB), formerly the Union
Board, will be holding elections
on Tuesday, April 19, for Executive Board positions, the six
officers of UUAB and the committee chairmen.
No previous membership on
any committee of Union Board
is required to run for the positions. Candidates for the Executive Board must be full-time students. Officers—president, three
vice-presidents, secretary
and
treasurer, must have achieved a
1,0 average the previous semester and maintained a 1.3 cumulative average.
Applications for the positions
will be available through Thursday, April 14, at the candy counter or in the Union Board office,
room 215 Norton. All applications are to 'be returned to the
Union Board office by April 14.
The President of UUAB presides at all board and executive

which are called at UUAB. The Treasurer, a chairmen
least twice a month. He is an of the Finance Committee, preex-officio member of all UUAB pares and administers the budcommittees and serves as the get. He also audits the accounts
Board representative on the Stuof all committees.
dent Association Board.
The new Leadership CommitThe first Vice-President, as tee is an advisory committee to
chairman of the Public Affairs promote student participation on
Council, is responsible for the all existing UUAB committees
coordination of all committees and provide training for present
on the Council and supervises members in social responsibility
the evaluation of all chairmen and leadership. Applications for
and committees on the Council. membership on the Leadership
He also assumes the responsiCommittee are available at the
bilities of the presidency in the candy counter next week.
President’s absence. The second
The following committee chairVice-President as chairman of the manships are available:
Arts Council coordinates and evalPublic Relations Chairman—uates all chairmen and commitcommunicates the purpose and
tees on the Council. The Third program scope of the UUAB
Vice-President as chairman of through various community medthe Activities Council coordinates ia; promotes a favorable image
and evaluates all chairmen and of the University student, procommittees on the Council.
vides for faculty-student interacThe secretary is in charge of tion.
Community Aid Corps Chairthe secretariat and is responsible for the minutes, correspondman—establishes and maintains
ence, and all records of the a central file of all community
service projects to provide practical educational experiences in
the outside community for the
University student.
Publicity Chairman—assists all
UUAB committees in promoting
their activities and services to
the University Community.
Recreation Chairman—sees that
diverse recreational opportunities
better to be given a third semesare available for students and
ter in the college, but generally
promotes the use of Union faciliit must be in a new program or ties.
major. Students should discuss
Arts and Crafts Chairman—enthese possibilities with their adcourages interest and participavisor.
tion of students in the Craft
Sophomores
meetings

Probation And Dismissal Statement
As Published By University College
University College has published a statement defining school
policy regarding probation and
dismissal;

Mr. Feinrider said that production has been stopped on ID
cards and pictures will not be
taken until further notice. He
said that this temporary delay
is necessary to incorporate the
new discount card. Green IBM
cards
issued
at registration
should be retained by students
until production continues.

Good standing is defined as
a minimum of a 1.0 or “C” ave-

rage, Dr. Milton Plesur of University College assured that each
student’s case is evaluated individually by his advisor. For
this reason, according to Dr.
Plesur, it will be a few weeks
after the close of the last examination before the College has
had the opportunity to examine
student records. “This time lag
is necessary to insure that each
student will be treated as an
individual.”
Probation and Warning
Students whose quality point
averages are below 1.0 receive
a warning classification. Students
with less that a .7 in their first
semester are placed on academic
probation.
While a student is on probation he may not represent the

The Graduate Student Association of S.U.N.Y
Invites

PAM THRU

SPECTRUM

All Graduate Students to

The Annual Graduate Student

j

of the present semester.”
Freshmen

Official University College procedure: In general, freshmen who
are on Probation or who are
warned must noticably decrease
their overall quality point deficiency in order to remain in
school. If a freshman is dismissed in June, he may be allowed to return to the University on
a strict probation basis after one
or more academic years have
elapsed. Attendance at another
University is not generally advised. Summer session attendance
is possible but a “furlough” will
still be required. Success at any
institution of higher learning depends largely on objectives and
motivation
It may be possible for a student who is improving but whose
overall average is still not 1.0 or

Sophomores in University College cannot be given the option
of the “furlough” since they must
have the requisite average (normally 1,0) by the end of their
sophomore year in order to be
promoted to a senior division.
In some cases, these students can
also qualify for an Associate degree and

in selected instances
will be given the option of a
fifth semester in which to earn
that degree. Usually, sophomores
whose averages are deficient will
be dismissed. Fifth semesters are
offered only to those earning the
Associate Degree or those steadily improving in a new program.
Students on Strict Probation
as a result of first semester
grades who received a special
notice cannot advance register
until second semester grades are
evaluated. However, all students
should plan a program with their
advisor.

Canadian-Amer. Exchange Program

picnic

Canadian - American

Spouses, Kids, Stags and Dates of
GSA invited Rain or Snow or Shine

APRIL
SUNDAY
I RM.

)

University at any public function, he may not participate in
organized student activities, and
he is required to attend each
meeting of each class for which
he is registered. “If there is not
a reduction in the quality point
deficiency, the College will dismiss such students at the close

24

Tickets Available
in 311 Norton Hall

relations

were discussed and suggestions
for establishing a Canadian-American exchange program were
made at the Intercollegiate Conference on Canadian American
Relations at Michigan State University last weekend.
Ivan Luczkiw, an undergraduate in the department of political
science represented UB at the
-

conference, Mr. Luczkiw reported

that two Canadian Parliament
members, New York Congressman Horton, and Republican Party advisor Dr. Douglas Bailey also attended.
Emphasizing the lack of understanding between Americans and
Canadians, Mr. Luczkiw suggested that a course in Canadian political science be offered by UB.

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Film Chairman—promotes appreciation in, and opportunity for
the University community to view
works of art.
encourages
Music Chairman
interest in and opportunity for
the University community to listen to various types of music;
also promotes the use of the
Music Room.
—

Literature and Drama Chairman—encourages exposure of the

University community to various

types of literature and drama and
promotes the use of the Browsing Library.

ATTENTION
WOMEN
GRADUATES
The
UNIVERSITY
OF
ROCHESTER
ROCHESTER, NEW YORK

We will be interviewing
at SUNY at Buffalo on
April 14 for a variety of
non teaching
positions.
Among the fine benefits
-

is a liberal tuition reduction plan which enables
full-time employees to
continue their education.
For further details contact

.

.

.

PLACEMENT OFFICE

TF 7-6120
Tickets Also Available at Norton Union Tickat Office

WATCH FOR PAISA NO'S SPECTRUM SPECIAL EACH WEEK

SUNY AT BUFFALO
Schoallkopf Hall

�Friday, April 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Editorial Comment

•

•

•

FEINBERG FUNDS
For the past week students and faculty have been
contributing to the Academic Freedom Fund administered
by an ad hoc committee of the AAUP. These funds are
earmarked for the effort to bring the “Feinberg cases”
at this University before the Supreme Court in hopes of
striking down the law which deprived this campus of
several fine teachers, and which subjected many others
to indignities and harrassments. The Feinberg law is a
violation of the principles of academic freedom and respectable discourse. The money to fight this abomination which robs each of us, not only of dignity, but of a
good education as well, comes from the academic community. The Spectrum urges everyone to give all he can
spare, and then to think carefully whether he can spare
a little more.
A VICTORY
The seven month strike in Delano, California, to gain
a living wage for the agricultural workers in the grape
industry won a major victory last Wednesday when
Schenley, the major grower in the Delano area, finally
agreed to recognize the striking National Farm Workers
Association, and agreed to negotiate working conditions
which, in the words of one of the strike organizers, “Have
remained unchanged since the writing of John Steinbeck’s
The Grapes of Wrath. The battle for decent working
conditions and wages has yet to be won at the bargaining
tables, but the capitulation by Schenley will hopefully
end the reign of brutality, terror, and starvation—the
weapons used by the growers to break the strike for the
last seven months.
Woody Guthrie, (who, by the way, is respectable
now, since the government just named a power station
after him) once said, “There are many kinds of men.
Some rob you with a shotgun, and some with a fountain
pen.” The Delano strikers have defeated the shotguns;
now they will have to fight more quietly and more cleverly to defeat the “other kind of robber.”
MORE INVESTIGATIONS
Another chapter in the “Town and Gown” controversy was written this week in City Hall. After years
of ignoring the University, City Hall decided that the
University was an “integral part” of the community and
decided to emphasize this Mttle known fact by calling
for an investigation of protest activities at this campus.
Following quickly (and obediently?) on the heels of
Senator Brydges’ announcement that he was calling for
similar investigations, the bill calling for the investigations seems to emphasize the fact that the very concept
of intellectually free education is in jeopardy. “War
fever”, authoritarian concepts of “education”, and the
hysteria which grips tin-pot politicians prior to elections
are coalescing to reduce this University to an expensive,
second-rate factory.
We shell resist all attempts to cheat us of a meaningful education, whether they stem from City Hall, Albany,
or eren beyond.

oCetterA

to

Will Hoase Library
Catalogue Facilities

A university newspaper has a
variety of functions to perform.
Some functions should be given
more coverage than others. The
editor must use his discretion to
aid in proper news coverage of
all events concerning a university’s students. However, the editor must take into account the
preferences of the majority of
students.
People outside the university
tend to generalize as to the attitudes of SUNYAB students according to the implications of the
artciles in the Spectrum. It is
possible that at the present time,
Spectrum coverage does not accurately reflect majority student
opinion on this campus. As a mat-

By BARBARA CONICLIO

This is Mm first in a series of
articles on tbe library. Generally it covers Mm problems of the
library and possible solutions.

In tbe years since tbe state
take-over of tbe University, the
library has experienced the influx of change. A library designed for 2,000 students now has to
accommodate 16,000. The results
have been, a salient lack of student and staff facilities. Many
students must go elsewhere to
study by 8:30 a.m. desks for tbe
staff have been moved into the
main reading room. Hie hallways
are often crowded with requisition assignments. Tbe ready exchange of books and periodicals
has been hampered because of
a deficit of space.
To partially offset this problem, temporary buildings are being assembled near the main
library. They will be ready for
occupancy this Fall. These new
quarters will accommodate the
Technical Services such as cataloguing and acquisition of books.
Hie periodicals now housed in
the lower level of Lockwood will
be transferred to the buildings,
thus providing additional slack
space. (Facilities for ona hundred
tlxty-fiva (165) students era under
construction.) Provisions for a
Science Library are also included
in the plans. Hie vacated space
in Lockwood will facilitate the
expansion of the Microfilm and
Documents Department.
Spokesmen for the University
Library Association
felt that
numerous problems could be solved by increased student and faculty co-operation. The students
and the faculty have the obligation to return overdue books and
to report books which are missing from the stacks. In a few
cases conduct in the library has
marred the campus image. Such
responsibility allows for the
smooth operation of the library
and the enhancement of its primary purpose of service for re
search and course study.

the Editor

ter of fact, we think that the
Spectrum is overbalanced in its
coverage of political activities on
campus and elsewhere.

May we suggest that, in addition to covering political issues,
you or your predecessor undertake to give greater coverage to
other university functions and
activities. This coverage might
include, for example, the University Placement Service, the
advisement procedure, counseling services, important research
in all departments, Norton Services, significant social functions,
the Library System, the Intramural and Varsity Athletic programs, New Campus developments, and profiles of student
leaders, to mention a few.

In order to determine the type
of coverage that the majority
of SUNYAB students wish for
their newspaper, it might be feasible to survey a signifciant sample of the student body. We are
sure that the results of such a
survey would help you immeasurably in planning the type and
substance of Spectrum articles.
It is possbile that if Spectrum
coverage
accurately
reflected
the attitudes and opinions of
the majority of SUNYAB students, the popularity of the Spectrum inside and outside the university would be enhanced.
We would very much appreciate

your printing of this letter.
Donald L, Mingle

J. J. Katz

The occurrence described in
the editorial concerning the
peace march was, of course, deplorable; however, it must be
noted that individuals outside of
the academic community too frequently demonstrate little tolerance or sensitivity for vital issues of the country. The split
between the left-oriented college
student and the average citizen
can only grow wider as the war
in Vietnam is escalated. I place

—

In major respects, however,
there has been no improvement.
Practically, parents leave their
young out on a limb with their
“freedom;” they are permissive
and even sentimentally approving of sexuality, but they do
not provide space, moral support, or practical information.
Police law is as barbarous as
ever, despite the fact that moral
legislation, with regard to sexual
matters like marriage and divorce, abortion, statutory rape,
or homosexuality (just as with
regard to gambling, alcohol, or
drugs) invariably does more harm
than good. And the school systems persist, as they did in my
childhood, in the fiction that sexuality simply does not exist.
Attitude of tha Schools it
the Worst
At present, in my opinion, the
attitude of the schools does the
worst damage. In the first place,
there is a terrible waste of opportunity
as is true, of course,
also with the rest of the schooling. At the elementary level, it
would be a great thing if the
wasted physical training would
include psychosomatic exercises
and eurhhythmics to unblock and
harmonize the anger, grief, and
sexuality that the dammed up
in the average child; but this is
impermissible because of the
school board, the mayor, the
church, and the yellow press.
High school and college would in
principle be ideal environments
for exploration in the risky field
of sex, under the protection of
benevolent teachers; but that
—

THE

—

will be the day! 1 have even found
it impossible to get a college
to adopt a course of group psychotherapy for seniors, so that
they can gain some

awareness

of themselves and one another
before they graduate, to marry
or not marry, to choose careers,

to vote.

But the worst damage is done
by the school’s denial of the
existence of sex, for this creates

a schizophrenic unreality. Since
sex does exist, for the children,

the schools become in so far unreal environments; there is no
doubt that this is a chief cause
of inattention and dropout. More
important, since the school is
overwhelmingly the unique public and official environment of
the young, children and adolescents begin to take their sexuality itself as not quite real,
for a chief property of reality
is to be publicly expressible and
to affect and be affected by other realities.
For Mio Young;
Timidity, Conformity

The consequences are evident
in the quality of American life
and the sexuality that is part and
parcel of it. For the young, sex
exists only in their own peergroup; it is therefore ignorant
and insulated. It must not interfere with homework, nor can it
energize writing, art, sport, career, or any other cultural pursuit. But as part of the youth
divorced
f'fsubHculiture,”
from
community or grownup meaning,
it necessarily becomes stereotyped. False privacy results in
timidity and conformity, and
prevents true solitude and individuality. Instead
of each
youngster developing according
to his own disposition, situation, and luck, and eventually
learning to cope with the demands of society, all are forced
into conformity to an uncultured
and jejune peer-group.
Conversely, insulated from the
rest of life and yet obviously tremendously important, sexuality

'becomes a glamorous big deal.
As Freud pointed out, sexuality
is co-equal among half a dozen
other major human functions,
like knowing, making a living,
art, citizenship, God, being a
parent, to all of which it contributes a color and value. But if
it is either inhibited or isolated,
it becomes destructive or trivial;
it is over-rated or it vanishes.

SPECTRUM

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

JEREMY TAYLOR

Business Manager
News Editor
Peter

RAYMOND D.

VOLPE

SUSAN GREENE

Assistant
ALICE EDELMAN
Angelina, Joanne Bouchier, Russell Buchman, Karen Green,
Lederman, Joan Roberts, Rick Schwab, Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman,

Eileen Teltler, Nancy Toder, Patti Wartley, Judy Weisberg.
Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
—Bonnie Bartow, Ron Ellsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb,
Audrey Logel, Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack, William Weinstein.
Sport* Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
—Mike Castro. Mike Dolan. Steve Farbman, Bob Frey. Scott Forman.
J.
B. Sharcot.

Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman.

Staff—Joanne Bouchier,

Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Staff —Carol Becker, Estelle Fox, Jocelyn Hallpern, Sandy Llppman, Betsy Orer,
Claire Sholtenfeld, Susan Zuckerberg.
Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
Staff —Terry Angelo. Audrey Cash, Pat Rosenfeld, Steve Silverman, Joseph

Student-Citizen Dichotomy Analyzed
TO THE EDITOR:

Since my own youth
I was
born in 1911
there has been
important progress toward freedom, naturalness, and honesty
in sexual matters. In child care,
as taught by 'Dr. Spock or the Department of Labor manual, there
is a widespread relaxation of
toilet training and a reasonable
tolerance of masturbation. There
has been a remarkable liberation
from censorship of so-called pornography, so that it is now almost
possible to write plain English
about most human problems. Information about contraception
and venereal diseases has become publicly available and useable. Psychology, whatever its
merits or demerits, has squelched
a lot of superstition. And by and
large, religion has let up on hellfire.
—

Spectrum Coverage Doesn't Reflect Majority
TO THE EDITOR:

Cjoodman

Manclnl.

the blame chiefly, although not
entirely, upon the citizen, who
may be so involved in his pursuit of financial security that
nothing else enters his mind.
On the other hand, the college

student who views the world
from a so-called “ivory-tower”
is also guilty of intolerance. I
do not proffer a solution to this
problem, since the nature of society is such that it scorns any
worthwhile deviation from the
"norm.” I do feel that the peace
march incident may have been

merely an isolated one, but it
frightens me to realize that not
only Buffalo, but all other major

cities have had similar incidents.

Not until everyone in the country (including the politicians)
realizes that killing is not a game,
that self-determination is a sacred freedom, that unprovoked
acts of violence belie ignorance
rather than patriotism
not
until then will this country be
worthy of its present status as
a world leader
Dainel M. Nussbaum
—

.

Photography

Staff—Don Blank.

Editor

Peter Bonneau,

Marc Levina, Ivan Makuch,
Robert Wynne.

EDWARD JOSCELYN

Joseph Feyes, Carol Good son. Alan Gruber.
Anthony Walluk. Susan Wortman.

Michael Solurl,

Circulation Manager
Advisor
Financial Advisor
Faculty

DIANE LEWIS
IRENE WILLET
DALLAS GARBER

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
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per

year,

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Represented
for national advertising by
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�Friday, April

The

•,

1966

grump

On Saturday last—in case you
had forgotten by now —the sun
was shining for a least a while.
In honor of this rare occasion
the spouse and myself decided we
should go out and live a bit.
Having so decided we went to
a service station so as to have
the muffler tightened so it
wouldn't sound like an angry
Tryanasoreass Rex going across
the peace bridge. &lt;1 didn’t have
the heart to capitalize it—will I
now be investigated by Earl
Brydges of the SDS?)
After a while—spent sitting in
the car reading the Buffalo Evening Newt, (which is really funnier—the editorial page or the
funnies?), and watching the mechanic divide his time in what
appeared to be a 50:1 ratio between pumping gas and trying to
repair our vehicle—the muffler
no longer roared. It just banged
on the bottom of the car every
time you started out or pulled
out in low. But you can’t have
everything and there is no law
against mufflers which bang, just
those that roar, right?
So we swoop over the peace
bridge through Fort Erie and up
to Toronto. Oh hell yes! Ever
try to swoop through Fort Erie
on the opening day of Fort Erie
Race Track and Money Machine?
It just don’t happen. Some two
hours after crossing the peace
bridge we finally found a parking
spot, and then had to go beck
and get the map so we could find
the car when that traumatic
moment came around.
So we get over onto Yonge
Street and time for the first
compromise of the day arrives.
There are two restaurants in
Toronto we have been drooling
over for some time. The menu of
the Viking is of greatest interest
to me while my wife has been
fascinated by the India House.
Wifely-wifely has—up to last
Saturday, mind you—been running around trying to find recipies for curry in various and
sundry cook books. Being impressionable I assume she knows
something about curries and I
agree that we will eat first at
the India House and have a late
snack at the Viking.
We
and sit down and
I start to worry. The waitress
is an Anglo-Saxon, which gave
brief substance to the hope this
was an Indian restaurant for
North Americans, however both
of the women in the establishment are dressed in saris and the
manager looks like he quit a
Churkh Unit of the British Army
to play professional football.
The crowning blow comes when

-

Friday

Forum: Department of History, 9 to 11:30 and 2 to 4:30,
Conference Theatre
Theatre: The Little Foxes (Lillian Heilman), Studio Arena Theatre, thru Saturday
Theatre: Act Without Words
No. 2 (Samuel Beckett) and The
Blind Men (Ghelderode), The
Workshop Theatre, 8:30 p.m.,
March 8 to 24
Officers
Photography Club;
elections, Norton 332, 4 p.m.
Saturday

Art Exhibit: Foster Hall, Third
Floor, All day
Manuscript*: William Hazlitt,
Lockwood Library
Observation Night: UB Amateur Astronomers, Hockstetter
114, 8 p.m.
Sunday

oCetterA

by STEESE

the menu arrives and my ever
loving blue eyed curry-smitten
spouse is forced to admit she
doesn’t know that much more
about 'Indian food than I do. I
know a little more now than I
did then. Primarily it is quite
warm, spice wise. I recommend
the restaurant to all but if you
flush, perspire, and have a
stomach which refuses to have
anything to do with digesting
food after you oat it when it is
Very highly spiced, as guess who
does?, I would recommend rather
vehemently that you do a very
cautious approach to the whole
manner.

to

the Editor

EDITOR’S NOTE: Since there still appears to be some confusion about the policy governing the “Letters
to the Editor/’ here are the three criteria which are applied to this section of the paper. (1) All letters
must be signed; names will be withheld upon request, but they must be affixed to the original copy.
(2) Letters should be limited to one typewritten sheet; we will consider longer letters, but we reserve
the prerogative to edit them to site. (3) We will not print letters which violate the libel and pornography laws.

Anti-Communists Concerned With Extremism
TO THE EDITOR:

As anti-Conununists at the UB

campus, we were very disturbed

by the alleged anti-Semitism and
violence against SDS, as reported
by the Spectrum. If these events
did occur as reported, we wish
to express our strongest condem-

As a matter of fact I noted
that for both myself and my wife nation of them and any other
the water glass was the most form of extremism which resorts
to violence or attacks people on
popular item. Interesting to me
the basis of their race or religion.
was the fact that my wife—she
likes curry, remember?—was havAt the same time, we are coning a more serious digestion
problem than I. Seems that this cerned with another type of exbatch of curry was somewhat tremism, which is not even menspicier that the last. She seems
less sure she likes curry now.
She decided a beer might help
wash some of the offending
material out, but she also wanted
an Alka-Seltzer. So, and you TO THE EDITOR;
really must 'believe this, she
dropped an alka-seltzer tablet
On Saturday, April 2nd, a numin her glass of beer. H she were ber of concerned citizens, the
normal would she have married nucleus of which came from the
me? We crept quietly away and
three local chapters of Young
left it sort of foaming all over Americans for Freedom and a
the table. Had a great head but group known as American Tacticit tasted terrible.
al Assault Against Communism,
We wandered through Yorkoutdid US’s famous war protestmy wife says it is too
ville
ors at the picketing game in
clean
listened to Judy Rodowntown Lafayette Square. In
derick at the New Gate of Cleve
the process, the pro-Vietnam pickhopefully a review found else
ets engaged in chanting and singwhere in this issue
and through ing, a la the Left, interspersed
the grounds of the University with spontaneous and unpromptof Toronto. I think a tour of the ed shouts directed at the war
U of T should be a requisite for protestors across the street. Not
those who are allowed to design once, however, did anyone in our
the various and sundry clapdemonstration shout, chant, or
boards that go up on campus.
sing anything derogatory of the
We did make one other minor
error. Tossed a peanut to a black
squirrel in Queens Park and we
Issue
April
were lucky to escape with our
lives from the horde of tree rats
and pigeons which promptly deTO THE EDITOR
scended.
I would like to congratulate the
When we came back over the Spectrum staff on the extremely
peace bridge from Fort Erie I humorous and satirical April 1
knew we were home. The cusedition. It was generally well
toms man sort of looked at my accepted and very apropos. Howthis ever, as in most previous editions,
beard and at his watch
was on the American Side of there was a glaring lack of recogand began muttering nition of the Greeks and the
course
to himself. He was the only gate Greek System.
open and I suspect he did not
The Greeks would greatly apwant to wake up the chief inspector because he let us go
through. Or perhaps he simply
assumed anyone who looked as
JAMES CALLAN
guilty of something as I did had
to be innocent.

tioned by, let alone condemned
in, the Spectrum—that is Far
Left-Wing Extremism. How many
people, we wonder, are aware of
the fact that the “Spirit and
Sword” magazine, whose staff
marched with SDS, is Communist? Or that the President of
Youth Against War And Fascism,
which marched with SDS, is a
Communist? Or that SDS itself
even accepts Communists as

antly hypocritical for any organization, claiming to support “democracy”, to work hand-in-hand

with those whose avowed purpose
is the destruction of all our liberties. We have made our position clear
we repudiate antidemocratic extremism of both the
left and the right, both Fascism
and Communism. We suggest that
SDS and the Spectrum do the
—

same.

members?
Steve Sickler
Frank
Dr. Marvin Zimmerman
Donald Rich

While we do not deny the right
of a person to hold any belief
he wishes to, we consider it blat-

Counter Picket Misrepresented

—

—

—

—

Fools

—

—

Jewish race or religion, as the
April 5th edition of the Spactrum
reported Mr. Rick Salter to have
alleged. The distance separating
the two demonstrations was only
about forty feet and our demonstrators were especially clear in
their articulation, so we cannot
believe that Mr. Salter misunderstood anything we said. We can
only take his allegation as a
smear, whose only purpose can

be to discredit the adherents to
our national policy of commitment to freedom, We’ve seen this
tactic used before. The Left, it
sems, will stop at nothing to
poison the public’s minds with
its ideas of acquiesence and appeasement. It is laughable that
Mr. Salter would even expect

Modem Dance Workshop: Clark
Gym, 7 p.m.
Play: Students for a Democratic Society, 4 to 6 p.m., Norton
234
Lecture; “The New University
Campus,” Dr. A. Westley Rowland, Sheraton Hotel, 12:30 p.m.
Tuesday

There’s been a lot of talk lateliberalizing the birth
control, divorce, and abortion
laws. The first two perturb me
not at all, but the last strikes
me as no less an offense against
justice than liberalizing the murder laws.
ly about

—

.

will
admis-

We would, therefore, appreciate it if the Spectrum would
print this letter so as to give as

much space to our report of what
we said as it did to Mr. Salter’s
opinion of what we said.
Bob Witnauer
Dave Eastman
Marriane Pemick
Kathy Love joy
Rollin Flower
Jerry Wallace
Jill Davis
Mrs. Carol Bleecher
Ellen Canteline

predate comments on their system, conduct, and nature no matter how satirical or critical it
may be. But, the great and just
grienvance of the Greeks is that
the implicit editorial policy of
the paper is to completely ignore
the more than eight hundred
members of fraternal organiza-

Spectrum staff again that the
Greeks are among the most active, well-meaning and educational undergraduate institutions that
exist and it is unfair and destructive to the University and to the
Greeks if the Spectrum chooses
to ignore their existence any
longer.

tions that exist.
I should like to remind the

—Anthony Lawrence

the right
feet. I submit that a much more
effident method than abortion
would be to wait for birth and
see. If fears do not materialize,
a life has been saved. If in fact
there is a deformity, let the
mother take a knife and do what
she was so willing to do beforewas
hand. What’s the matter
it easier when there was a
stomach wall protecting the victim from your sight? (Or is it
the other way around?)

will of his masters, his parents.
To sum up, if aibortion is ever
moral then it is always moral. I
submit that manifest evidence
shows that abortion is not always
moral, and hence is not ever
moral.
"

—

On the law books, murder refers to the willful killing of a
man who has been born, while
abortion differs only in that the
victim has not yet reached that
Class
CounMeeting: Freshman
stage of development. The wide
p.m.,
6
6to
234
7:30
Norton
cil,
between the two in
distinction
Dance
Club,
Meeting: Modern
social and legal mores is not
Clark Gym, 3 to 4 p.m.
justified by the unimportant distinction between the born and
Lecture: School of Social Welthe unborn baby. Unimportant
fare Association, 11:30 a m., Norfrom the point of view of the
ton 233
humanity of the child, that is:
his capacity for reason, his personality, his semblance to adults
Two films sponsored
—all those things which make
by the Union Board Film
are
him distinctively human
Committee, “You Can’t
no more apparent after birth
take It With You” and
than before. And yet it is this
“Mr. Deeds Goes to feeling that the fetus is someTown” will be shown
how not human that is used to
justify abortion.
in 147
■re

such a charge to be believed. We
could not care less how many
of these peaceniks are Jewish.
We care only that they aid the
spread of Communism.

Commended—Lack of Coverage Noted

.

Weekly Calendar
April 8-12

PAG! PIV*

SPECTRUM

ft is said that abortion is justi-

fiable when there is grave danger
that the child will be born with
a serious VhontoaT or mental de-

Other justifications, ranging
from concern for the life of the
mother to desire to control the
size of the family, flow profusely from those who would
liberalize the laws. What strikes
me as interesting is that everybody seems to have his pet justification
his pet circumstance
when abortion should be allowed
while at no other time. My reasoning follows: If the killing of
an innocent fetus is justified in
one case, then it is not always
wrong. If killing an innocent
human being is always wrong but
killing an innocent fetus is not,
then the fetus must be something less than human. If lesser
beings are ta.be.d&lt;Jf(U. w &gt;l h by
mu as he sees fit, than the unborn Infant may be killed at the

—

TRIVIA

—

The Skanks will play
Alpha Epsilon Pi on
WKBW-TV April 18 in
a Trivia Tournament to
be taped April 15 at
WKBW at 8:00. Free
tickets for the taping
may be obtained at the
box office starting today.

—

PARKING

REQUEST

Students and faculty
members are requested
by the Veterans’ Administration Hospital to refrain from parking in
hospital parking facili-

ties.

•

�Friday, April 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

IFllILlSCio $iii Gherman

A REVIEW

•

STCESE

&lt;*

•

•

son like not having

a

car

you

Folk
A Patch of Blue, the soap-opera disguised as art now dead. Apparently some people
Niagara
on
the
new
theatre
out
playing at the Cinema I,
just have not gotten the word
Falls Boulevard, features Sidney Poitier playing Sidney yet. Io,..Toronto —which is probPoitier, Shelly Winters playing Shelly Winters, and a ably too great a distance to drive
new Hollywood acquisition, Elizabeth Hartman, who is for those who consider the Kingdistinguished by having the most trembling lower lip ston Trio and Peter, Paul, and
epitome of folk art
ever seen on a wide screen. She can’t act very well (so Mary as the
exist several decent
there
award),
academy
an
nominated
for
naturally she gets
places to hear folk music in varbut she pouts beautifully, not only in A Patch of Blue, ious guises.
but also in The Group, now playing at the Amherst
across from campus. The former film is emptional garThe one which would probably
bage (luckily some of the dialogue was drowned out by interest anyone who really thinks
the sniffles of the audience during the tear-jerking folk music is still alive is the
New Gate of Cleve. Over the last
scenes), the latter is intellectual garbage.

(Brown to Ybu”, “Buddy Can
You Spare a Dime,” “Mistreated,” “Things About Goin’ My
Way,” “Chaffeur,” and “Sportin’
Life.”

Judy Roderick is a not too
tall, rather attractive blonde
young woman who sings blues,
and in my opinion sings them
very well. The voice is not classic
blues perhaps but the feeling
and interpretation of a wide
range of material are very, very

Both she and the Gate of
Cleve (New type) are worthy of
some support. But if you can’t
drive that far for some silly rea-

good.

With Audience Participation

Music is supposed to be

—

two or three months such as
Eric Anderson, Phil Ochs, and
now Judy Roderick have worked
this rather small and intimate
club'.

And it is a wide range of material she does but it is all blues,
and perhaps this is what makes
one aware of the talent he is
watching. When Miss Roderick
says it is blues it is very difficult
to argue with her. Because it is
when she is through it. No forcing mind you. She does not
squeeze her material into a blues
vein. You just wonder why the
hell you never heard in that
song what is so obviously there

Winters
“A Patch of Bloo" itarrlng Sidney Pettier and Shelley

The Group, however, is redeemed somewhat by solid
acting performances by most of the cast, especially
Robert Emhardt and Candice Bergen. Undoubtedly, much
of the credit for the acting should go to Sidney Lumet,
the director, whose strongest point as evidenced in all
his films so far (The Hill was a masterpiece) is his ability to get maximum performance from his actors. Also,
Lumet, more than any other American director today,
has the uncanny ability to evoke great tension by his use
of the close-up shot.

Unfortunately, Lumet’s personal vision is absent
from the film by and large
he was working within
large studio production values and was merely hired as
the director. It is not “his” film. One can only hope that
the salary he received directing The Group will allow
him the artistic freedom in the future to make another
film as fine as The Hill.
—

The two greatest failings of the film are (1) the
social issue (the 30’s in America) which underpins the
structure of the film is rendered in a superficial manner;
and (2) the psychological issue (latent lesbianism) which
underpins the content of the film is probed in the same
superficial way. What the film does render in a manner
which is not superficial is an issue which is superficial in
the context of the theme and passe in the context of contemporary society
namely, the "sexual revolution.”
At the end of the film, one wants to say: “Well, if that’s
the way Mary McCarthy and her Vassar friends were
really like, how intolerably boorish and silly they are
were.” Both Miss McCarthy and the producer of the film
are on the wrong side of the irony.
—

-

now.

She used to sing for Jerry
Raven at the Limelite for five
dollars a night way back when.
She has come a long way since
then. She is poised and a very
warm and unpretentious performer, giving the impression she
likes what she is doing and that
she hopes to keep on doing so.
The admission is $1,50 on weekdays and $2.00 on weekends.
When you consider the gasoline
expenses it is not going to be an
inexpensive trip. But it very definitely is worth it.
Saturday night last she did
such things as “Loveless Child”
by Tom Pasley and an excellent
song by Richard Weissman called
“Someone to talk my troubles
to." Still in the contemporary
supvein she sang Dylan’s
posedly his at least
“He was
a Friend of Mine” and Sylvia
Fricker Tyson’s
“You Were
On My Mind,” in a version without drums, cannons, and electronic hardware of various sorts.
If you like your blues from the
good old days before all the
young tads above started to write
she includes such things as “Miss

If you dcr not recognize these
titles maybe you are should run
up and find out—-eh? And while
you are there listen for “Blues
On My Ceiling,” “Then Some,”
the latter being what used to be
termed an earthy song, “Two Hoboes," and “Louisville Lou” and
how about I stop here though I
could go on for a while yet. If
you really know her from work
here in town maybe you will
concur in her being worth driving that far to hear, I think she
is.

will find two Judy Roderick albums around. The more recent
came out last December on Vanguard, VRS 9197, entitled “Woman Blue,” and a previous album
was recorded on Columbia, “Ain’t
Northin’ but the Blues,” and if
you order by number CL 2153—
for mono, sorry but that is all I
wrote down.
For the sake of our somewhat
strained budget I try and stay
as far away from record stores
as possible. This last weekend
has pushed our record list out
of sight. Not only do we want
the two Judy Roderick albums
but new albums are either out
or due very soon from Ian and
Sylvia, Eric Anderson and Phil
Ochs. We certainly can’t cut out
drinking, but now if we didn’t
eat for a week do you suppose
that would rebalance our deficit.

WBFO Presents Program
WBFO, UB’s student-operated
FM radio service (88.7mc), will
present a unique art program
series in April entitled “Talking
Painting”. A novel approach to
audience participation in the visual aspect of art, the program
features informal discussions of
student artists’ work by the students, their classmates and professors.
The visual aspect is provided
for the audience by a center-fold
section in WBFO’s April program
guide which contains color reproductions of actual paintings
by the student artists. Reproductions are the work of senior and
sophomore art students.
The radio series, recorded in
the art studios of UB Professors
John Mclvor and Willard Har-

ris, is an informal, relaxed approach to art. Basis for this new
and novel method of insight into
contemporary artistic thought
came through collaboration of
Professor Mclvor and Station
Manager William Siemering.
William A. Penn, a graduate
assistant in music at the University, has composed an original
music score for the program.
His compositions for brass and
percussion instruments
have
been created to compliment the
student works.
Program broadcast will be on
Mondays at 7:30 p.m. and rebroadcast on Wednesdays, at 4 p.m.
Copies of the April program guide
are available from the station,
3435 Main St., Buffalo 14214.

This fcTTHE

GROUP”

—

—

DOTTIE

—

£ jHv UK
wW i

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f
I

1

POLLY

The problem with A Patch of Blue is the people
who made the film know all too well which side of the
irony they are on. Everyone I have spoken to who has
seen the film has reacted strongly and favorably to it.
For me, the film is in the tradition of One Potato, Two
Potato
and my reaction is both anger and nausea.
“College exploitation!” the pressbook publicity campaign notes, “College campuses represent a wide open
field of ready made audiences for your showing. Attract
this age-bracket by an appeal to their emotions.” Or even
worse: “Contact your local representatives of organizations which aid the blind . . Invite these people as well
as prominent church personnel to view the film. They
can be of enormous help to get the word of mouth
around.” As Wallace Ford, who, as the girl’s grandfather. gives the best acting performance in the film,
says at one point: “I’m sorry, I’d like to help clean up this
mess, but I can’t
I have to go out and get drunk.”

KAY

i

2

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“■sr

—

POKEY

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CANDICE BERGEN as law,

OCROuris

JOAN HACKETTbW*

SV©MARY
(Mcc.\rih\

&gt;

ELIZABETH HARTMAN as F&gt;r,ss

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TK#1
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SHIRLEYKNIGHTas Poll,

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GROUP'
JOANNA PETTETaska,
MARY-ROBINREODasPoke,
JESSICAWALTERasht*,
KATHLEEN WIDOOES as Helena

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THURS. FRI.
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Matinees Vi

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•

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HELENA

CHARLES K FELDMAN

.

Of course, one responds to the plight of the characters. One would have to be almost inhuman not to respond. But it is precisely because the situation is so
pitiable, so frighteningly terrible, and the treatment of
that situation is so glib and dishonest, that my reaction to
beone »f disgust,
-i-

LIBBY

f

SAT.

Price

�

THIS PICTURE IS
RECOMMENDED
FOR ADULTS

JAMES BRODERICK as Dr Mjele, HAL HOLBROOK as Gus Leroy
JAMES CONGDON as Sloan
RICHARD MULLIGAN as Dick Brorm
«oe™ nmaror
LARRY HA6MAN as Ha-aid

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M«U RelMSed Uni UNITED

NOW PLAYING!

ARTISTS

�Friday, April 8, 1964

SPECTRUM

Alpha Gamma Delta's spring
pledge class officers are: Claudia
Buczkowsfci, President; Melody
Weiler, vice-president; Anne Recore, secretary; Gerri Hecker,
treasurer; Sandy Ohurco, chaplain; Wendy Bannister, program
chairman; Barbara Berg, scholarship chairman; Joan Groucaski,

activities chairman.
Alpha Phi Delta's pledge class
officers are: Kenneth Parnett,
president; Albert Sallato, treasurer; Matthew Nowocien, secretary.
The officers of Beta Sigma Rho
are: Steven Litvak, Chancellor;
Richard Miller, vice-chancellor;
Sam Marcus, auditor; Jack Stemberg, Secretary; Irwin Sandler,
warden; Henry Gertsman, vicewarden; Barry Cohen, historian;
Roy Nisenson, chaplain.
Christa Ulbrich and Janet Leslie of Chi Omega were elected
president and treasurer respectively of Pan Hellenic Council.
The Gamma Phi pledges will
hold a car wash on the corner
of Union and Genesee from 11

NOTES

Jules And Jim In Conference Theater

a.m. to 5 p.m. The $1.25 fee
will cover vacuuming, whitewalls,
and windows (inside and out) besides the washing of the ear.
Phi Kappa Pti’s spring officers
are: Carl Millerschoen, president;
Roger Fredricks, vice-president;
Lee Schweichler, treasurer; Tony
Capozzi,
recording
secretary;
John Sansone, corresponding secretary; Bob Schmidt, chaplain;
Gary Helfenstein,
messenger;
John Oampagnola, sargent-atarms; Frank Domino, historian;
Marty Groet, Pledge Master.
Donald Gardner is Pi Lambda
Tau'i representative to the Inter
Fraternity Council, A G. T. Stag
will be held at Johnny’s Tavern
for the brothers and pledges tonight.

Theta Chi Fraternity’s officers
are: Gary McGovern, president;
Gary Fadale, vice-president; Ro-

bert Allen, secretary; Robert
Marko, marshal; Thomas W. Stratton, historian; Jeff Kenyon, chaplin; Larry Mackey, first guard;
Robert Agoglia, second guard.
Founders day is today.

Friendships between men are
often not very complicated. They
are based on similar likes and
dislikes and
an important
'point
a common interest in
women. Friction can and does
arise when two friend's become
interested in the same woman.
—

—

Jole* and Jim a motion picture
Jeanne Moreau, Oskar
Werner and Henri Serre, which
will be playing in the Conference
Theatre this weekend is the story
of such a relationship. To add
to the complications the triangle
continues over a period of 20
years through various states of
love, matrimony and engagement
and World War II. Ineidently
one of the men is French and
the other is German,
starring

A picture such as this runs
both the danger of being turned
into a Peyton Place soap opera
tragedy or a clinical analysis
of a menage a trois. Director
Traffau does neither and instead
presents the viewer with sympathetic people giving every indication of being alive.

The Man' To Be Performed Monday
The Man, an original theater
piece on the Mississippi Freedom
Labor Union composed by Thomas
Hanna and Nancy Cave, will be
performed by the Students For
A Democratic Society Free Theater Group Monday, April 11 at
4:30 in the Conference Theater.

Hanna. He added that contributions collected at the perform-

Mr. Hanna said that the presentation involves the experimental use of tape recorders and
slide projectors. He continued,
“the content is not propagandists. No attempt is made to convince anybody of anything. Instead, we have tried to create an
experience, probably a disconcerting one, I guess, out of several discordant elements. The
play moves from an informational stance to one of total assault
on the audience.’”

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

The Mississippi Freedom Labor Union grew out of a strike
by Negro farm hands last June
against plantation owners who
pay workers $3 a day for twelve
hours of labor, according to Mr.

ance will benefit MFLU Local
4, Tribbett, Mississippi.

GENERAL NOTICES
University College Students—(except those on strict academic,
probation) the remaining dates
to pre-register for fall semester
1966 are as follows:
April 11 through April 15
M, T, U, V

Continuous from

*2 p.m.

April 18 through April 22
I
April 25 through April 29

G, P,

W, D

I

RODGERS &amp; IRMMERSTEIxNS

ki\(;

DEBORAH KERRAll
MMOnift

v\ni“
fajhi

WEEKLY CALENDAR
April 12
Seminar in Bioengineering
the third in this series of sem
inars features Dr. Cora G. Sal
tarelli, assistant professor of engineering, whose topic is “Origin of Life,” 112 Parker Engineering, 3 p.m.
April 13

The Department of Chemistry
Dr. Lawrence Dahl,
professor of chemistry, University of Wisconsin. The topic is
"Recent Structural Advances in
Organometallic Complexes,” Rm.
A-70 Acheson, 4:30 p.m.
—presents

Sigma Xi Lecture
features
Dr. Marian E. White, associate
professor of anthropology, whose
topic is “Changes in Settlement
Patterns Among Indian Groups
in Western New York," Room
G-22 Capen Hall, 8 p.m.

OWRmiMIRHIIW

ROYAL ARMS
OUR EASTER SHOW
OPENS FRI., APRIL 8
1965 BEST FEMALE

VOCAL PERFORMER
ASTRUD GILBERTO Sings
1966 “Grammy Award
Winning Song
.

The Department of Modern
Languages and Literature—presents an illustrated lecture, in
English, by Sever Trifu, University of Cluj, Cluj, Romania, and
visiting lecturer in Romanian at
UB under the sponsorship of the
State Department. The topic is

FREE SODA

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by DiRose
99( for Big
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“THE SHADOW OF
YOUR SMILE’'

ASTRVD

GILBERTO
Comii

Weekly newsreels of campus
events are now being produced
by Martin Sadoff, Chairman of

the Fine Arts Film Committee,
David Edclman, Editor-Elect of
the Spectrum, and Peter Craig
of Audio Visual Aid. They will

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“Romanian Architecture," Room
229 Crosby Hall, 2 p.m.
The University of Chicago
Alumni Association
presents
Professor Herbert J, Storing, department of political science,
University of Chicago, whose topic is “Negro Leadership: Martin
Luther King and Frederick Douglass,” Faculty Club, 8:30 p.m.

deposit

PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Seniors and Graduate Students
—due to the passage of the Medicare Bill, the Social Security
Administration needs to fill 400
positions in the New York Region which includes the states
of New York and New Jersey.
As a result the Federal Service
Entrance Examination will be
administered on this campus April 16, 1966, in Room 70 Acheson Hall, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Students interested in taking
this exam must sign up at the
University Placement Services before April 15, 1966.

The Upjohn Pharmaceautical
Company is showing a film on
Wednesday, April 13, at 10 a m.
in the Conference Theater of

Norton Hall. All students interested in pharmaceutical sales are

April 14

10 BIG HUES

.

Weekly Newsreels of Campus Events
To Be Shown At Film Presentations
be shown in the Norton Conference theatre along with the weekly presentations of the Fine Arts
Film Committee.
The black and white 16mm
films will be shown in the place
of the international newsreels
currently in use, The first week
includes filming of Clinton Deveaux’s address at the opening
of Discriminating about Discrimination. in addition to footage
of James Farmer's address. The
newsreel also includes filming of
the SDS Peace March and the
Exhibit from the School of Engineering.

—

May 2 through May 6
B. F

—

Starring

Francois Truffaut's "Jotai and Jim", starring Jeanne Moroau

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

NOW
SHOWING

Ithi

PAGE SEVEN

Offer Limited

invited to attend.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS

April 8

Berkshire Life Insurance Co.

Remington Office MachinesDivision of Sperry Rand
April II
Bankers Life Co.
April 14
University of Rochester
Bethlehem Steel Corp.
April IS
Grand Way
East Irondequoit School District

The idea was conceived by Martin Sadoff who narrates the newsreels. Mr. Craig of Audio Visual
is in full charge of production,
and Mr. Edelman of the Spectrum
serves as News Supervisor.

UB Hosts String

Player's Institute
The third annual String Players’ Institute will be held at UB

April 11 through

14.

Daniel Schroeder announced
that the Institute will present
lessons, string quartet coaching,
small ensemble rehearsals and
participation in a string orchestra conducted
by
Alexander
Schneider. He mentioned that
the Institute will bring approximately 40 high school violinists,
cellists, violists, and contrabass
players from five eastern states
to this area.
Daytime ensemble rehearsals
will be held at Kenmore East
High School from 10 a.m. to
1:30-4 p.m. The String Orchestra
will rehearse from 6:30-9:30 p.m.
on Monday and Tuesday. These
sessions arc open to all interested persons. The String Orchestra will present a concert
at its final session in Baird Hall
on Thursday at 4:30 p.m.
In addition to the Budapest
quartet members, J. Roisman, B
Kroyt, M. Schneider, A. Schneider, the faculty of the Institute
includes UB instructors Livingston and Pamela Gearhart and
Creative Associate Buell Neid-

linger.

�Friday, April I, 196*

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

SCOUTING
REPORTS..

INTRAHUBALS
All was relatively quiet on the
intramural front last week. The
only noise made came from the
spiking of volleyballs at Clark
Gym on Wednesday and Thursday, indicating the opening of
the volleyball league.

Division II

W L
4 0
Joques
3 1
Phi Ptsi
Alpha Sig 3 1
1 3
TBKE
Beta Sig 1 3
Skanks
0 4

W L
APD
4 0
Unbeat.
3 1
Sup. Apes 3 1
APO
1 3
13
Phi Ep
Internal’s. 0 4

Thursday League

After one week of action, APD,
Sig Ep, Gamma Phi, ABPi and
the Joques all have undefeated
records.
The standings

(Cont’d from Pg. 10)

Wednesday League

Division I

/

Tommy Reynolds, Larry Stahl,
Jose Tartabull, and Manny Jiminez, an almost unbelievably poor
group of outfielders. I sincerely
hope the A's can improve soon,
or the Show-Me State will soon be
with only one major league town.

Well, you’ve just read my un4 0 professional (only because I don’t
Sig Ep
4 0
Gam. Phi 4 0
3 1 get paid for doing it) preview of
AKPsi
3 X
2 2
American League camChimps
13 the 1966
1 3
paign. It should prove to be one
0
1
Sig
3
4
Phi
1 3 of the best seasons the Junior
Phi L. D, 0 4
Circuit has ever enjoyed, as any
one of the first five clubs could
easily take the pennant. Carl Yastrzemski should take the batting
title, with the home-run crown
being most fiercely contested by
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PERSONAL

To those who have purchased
the latest edition of the New
Student Review: In the third
stanza of the poem “Carpenter”
on page one, the word “sandcastel” should read “sandcastels”.
Must locate kind young man who
turned my car around after
accident, Wednesday, March 30,
on Parkridge, about 1:55 p.m.
Call 832-2095.
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No selling experience necessary.
Mr. Lindbergh, 834-6094 after 6

2 bedroom furnished apartment
near campus to sublet for summer, Call 833-6416 after 6 p.m.

The Senate Academic Affairs
Committee is investigating student attitudes, independent study
opportunities, and course evaluation.

“Comprehensive exams,” Mr.
Caroll affirmed, “should be given,
but not as a requirement for
graduation as is now the case.
A student should qualify for
graduation on the merit of his
own real quality index, and not
on the basis of one test.”

Committee
chairman
Tom
Caroll announced that a test is
being administered by the sociology department to assess student attitudes. The test will be
given during the next two weeks
to determine the programming
necessary for each type of student at UB.

He continued, “The new Senate
subcommittee on course evaluation is currently dealing with the
departments of Modern Languages
and Math. This computer study
will probably be broadened next
year to include 100 to 400 level
courses in all departments.” Mr.
Caroll expressed hope that a
full course evaluation committee
would be formed to replace the
subcommittee. He suggested that
a chairman with several subchairmen and an adequate budget would be better suited to
cope with the problem.

Mr. Caroll mentioned that
another questionaire on academic
honesty will be issued to students and faculty members to
obtain opinions on cheating and
plagiarism. He said that Dean
Siggelkow will be consulted on
ways to enforce rules on cheat-

ing.

The opportunity for independ-

ent study whereby students take

a course on a pass-fail basis or
learn without attending classes
or taking exams is also under investigation, according to Mr.

Caroll.

Mr. Oaroll indicated that the
most troublesome problem arising out of the course evaluation
study is the lack of student support and participation.

Mentioning University College

and the College of Arts and
Sciences, Mr. Caroll explained,
“Both divisions want to revise

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SPECTRUM

BASEBALL TEAM
SHOWS PROMISE
By RICH BAUMGARTEN
Experience, good pitching, and
depth could make 1966 a big
year for the UB varsity baseball
team. With the return of many
of test year’s starting varsity and
the addition of six players—up
from a winning freshman team—
Coach Jim Peelle has found himself in the seldom-found position
to make room for the sophomores.
Right now there are some great

heald-to-head battles for the starting positions. Around the infield,
“Gordie” Shaw seems to have
won the first baseman’s job. Gordie 'has a 'great glove and is a
fine clutch hitter. At second base,
juniors Bob Pusateri and Doug
Long are battling it out for starting honors. Pusateri was the ’65
shortstop and has a good glove
and hat. long, who can also play
the outfield , has a fine defensive
glove, and is a great “pressure”
player.

Ron Leiser appears to have the
inside track for the shortstop position. Leiser was alternated at
four different positions, but coach
Peelle feels Ron’s future is at
short.
At the “hot corner,” Fran
Buchta, up from last year’s freshman team, and veteran Daxe Dux

are nose to nose for the third
baseman’s job. Coach Peelle is
“wellpleased” with Buchta’s hitting, while Dux continues to impress with his all-around play.
The UB outfield is loaded with
talent. Sophomores Brian Hansen
and Ken Rutkowski both could
make the starting line up. Hansen has a fine arm and can swing
the stick. Rutkowski could be one
of UB’s star players. He has
great speed, a strong arm and a
real good bat. Veteran Joe Kwiatkowski rounds out a solid outfield. Kwiatkowsfci, in addition
to being a fine hitter, gives the
team valuable experience. Outfield prospects Joe Morelli and
Fred Geringer both have good
arms and 'bats, and both could
challenge for a Starting assign-

ment.

Oatohing is another bright spot

on this year’s team. Power hitter

Jhn Duprey is expected to win
the starting assignment. Duprey
is being counted on as one of the
■big UB “home run” men. Jim is
backed by John Grad and Fred
Wieser, both talented and hardhitting catchers.
UB is very Strong in the pitching department. Two of last year’s
top pitchers Don Potwora (2-0

and 0.95 ERA) and Ron McHXven
(2-0 and 1.80 ERA) head tills
year’s staff. The UB mound staff
is bothered by several fine looking prospects including hardthrowing Tim Uraskevich, Dick
Pirozzolo, and George Mason. The
entire pitching staff has been
impressive with its control, and
the ability to keep the ball low.
The success of this year’s team
depends on the ability of the
players to play as a unit in facing a rugged schedule. Based on
head coach Jim Peelle’s and assistant coach Billy Monkarsh’s
optimism as well as the rapid
pelling of the squad, UB has a
very promising season ahead.
Baseball Notes: In batting practice, Duprey lined the ball
through the batting cage . . .
Joe Morel!!, a good line-drive hitter, may be hard to keep out of
lineup . . . best batting rhythm
on team? Coach Jim Peelle, the
head coach looked pretty good
in practice . . . Coat* Peelle and
assistant coach Mankarsh have
the team really hustling.

1965-64 UB Tennis Team

TENNIS SQUAD HOLDS PRACTICE
With only Bob Barrett missing from last year’s squad, Coach

to a fine season. Returning from
last year’s 10-3 team are Dennis
Brzezinski, Len Schneider, Matt
Yushik, Wally Mann, Larry Glazer, and Don Mingle. With some
good looking sophomores com-

ing up, it looks as if UB will continue to dominate tennis in the
Western New York

area.

SCHEDULE
April 14—Erie Tech
April 14—Erie Tech
April 19—Gannon
April 20—'Buffalo State
April 22—Niagara
April 23—St. Bonaventure
April 26—Rochester
April 27—Hobart
April 29—Syracuse
May 3—Colgate
May 5—Niagara
May 6—Alfred
May 7—Cortland
May 0—Geneseo

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�American League
lefty combination at each outfield
position with Valdespino, Allison,

By J. B. SHARCOT

For the first time in many
years, the New York Yankees
aren't going to be automatically
put down by the prognosticators
as the team most likely to win
the American League pennant.
The Yanks suffered a disastrous
season last summer and aren’t
likely to rebound too far up in
the standings this year. In fact,
I doubt the Bronx Bombers will
ever again rule the Junior Circuit
as supremely in the future as
they have done since 1949. The
other teams have simply become
too strong for the Yankees to
win fourteen pennants in sixteen
years. With the free-agent draft
and the small number of minor
leagues, the opportunities to
build a dynasty will he few, indeed. The Yankees will have to
rely on being consistently able
to make wise player trades, but
this is virtually an impossibility,
since no one likes to feel swindled. Therefore, the American
League pennant flag should be
up for grabs this year, and for
many years to come.

Following are my evaluations
of each team and in what place
I expect each to finish:
Chicago Whita Sox—The Pale
Hose should once again have the
&gt;best and deepest pitching staff
in baseball this season, especially
if Gary Peters can come back to
his 1963, 1964 form, and the
spring training injury to the Hoyter (Wilhelm) doesn’t prove to
be too serious. Also, if A1 Weis
is placed permanently on second
base and Don Buford is shifted
to the hot comer, both the speed
and the defensive ability of the
team should be improved. The
lone weakness that has and should
continue to bother the Chisox is
their lack of batting punch, unless Pete Ward and Floyd Robinson can display signs of recovering the touch. Skowron can’t be
expected to improve over

1965

and neither can Romano. Hansen,
Buford or Danny Cater. However,
improvement should be expected
from the aforementioned Ward
and Robinson plus Ken Berry and
Tommy Agee, who was hurt most
of 1965 season. The Southsiders
won’t scare anyone this year, but
with Horlen, John, Buzhardt, Fisher, Howard. Pizarro, and Peters
(plus possibly Wilhelm), the
White Sox should be sufficiently
strong to take the flag this season.

Minnesota
enjoyed

a

Friday, April

SPECTR U M

PAGE TEN

Twin*—The Twins

very succesful season

last year, winning the American
League pennant and taking the
Dodgers to the final game of the
World Series before bowing. Alas,
they have the same team back
this season plus the services of
Jim Merritt and Andy Kosco from
the start. Except possibly for second base, every position is manned more than adequately. The
pitching staff is solid and the
outfield is loaded with talent.
Versalles is a fabulous shortstop,
Battey is a fine catcher, and Killebrew and Mincher have super
power. At the present time there
is a five-way battle for the second
base position between Kindall,
Tovar, Rollins, Quilici, and Bernie
Alien. Tovar is the best bitter
of the group, but is a very erratic
fielder. The Twins have a righty-

Hall, Nossek, Oliva, and Kosco.
Grant, Kaat, Pascual, Merritt, Boswell, P«rry, Klippstein, Worthingtion, and Pleis comprise the talented, though not spectacular,
pitching staff. Minnesota is well
capable of winning the championship again this year, but I feel
the National League jinx of no
team repeating will become the
habit in the Junior Circuit as
well.
Detroit Tigers—For my thirdplace team, I’m picking the Detroit Tigers, quite possibly the
most improved team in the American League for 1966. With the
additions of Monbouquette and
Tracewski plus the fact that Kaline, D e m e t e r, and McAuliffe
should be healthy once again, the
Motor City Bengals can’t help
but being an improved team this
year. Their bullpen looms as their
one possible weakness. Their
pitching staff (starters), infield,
and outfield are in fine shape for
the upcoming season, as would
be the catching department if
Bill Freehan can regain his form
of 1964. The five starters figure
to be McLain, Sparma, Lolich,
Aguirre, and Monbo. Having
Dave Wickersham in the bullpen
from season’s start plus a healthy
Larry Sherry and Terry Fox
would go a long way to eliminate
the Bengal bullpen shortcomings.
With Wilie Horton, A1 Kaline,
Mickey Stanley, Gates Brown, Don
Demeter, and Jim Northrup, the
Tigers have one of the best outfields in baseball. Don Wert and
Norm Cash had fine seasons last
year and their continued good
play plus better help from the
bullpen is all the Tigers should
need to secure a high finish this
campaign.

Baltimore Orioles—The Orioles
of 1966 should be a vastly different ballclub from the team of
1965 even though there has been

only one personnel change: Pappas for Frank Robinson. Robby
has already gone on a homer

binge and should continue this
type of hitting into the regular
season. With the absence of Milt
Pappas, the Oriole pitching staff
suddenly becomes a little sketchy.
They have no on* on the staff
they can be sure of for having
a good season. Barber, Bunker,
Hall, McNally, the Millers, Bertaina, and Palmer are all question
marks for one reason or another.
They could all come through, or
all experience poor seasons. What
they may lack in pitching consistency, the Birds should more

than make up for in their Murderers’ Row of Blefary, Powell, and
the Robinsons (Brooks and Frank).
A home-run total of 120 or more
would be no surprise from this
powerful foursome. Aparicio and
Adair make a nifty duo around
the keystone sack and overall
team speed and defense should
be average. Without Dick Brown
available, their catching staff becomes barely adequate, and center field does not appear too
strong at the moment. However,
the Orioles' power should overcome enough weaknesses to land
them in the first division.
Cleveland Indians— Similar to
the Tigers, the Tribe from Cleveland has depth, power, and a fine
array of starting pitchers. But,

double-play combinations in history. At first base the Angels
can choose among veterans Joe
Adcock, Vic Power, and Siebern.
Bob Rodgers is a fine backstop,
though his hitting has left much

year in left field, center field,
third base, catcher, and one of
the pitching positions, in the persons of Frank Howard, Don Lock,
Ken McMullen, Johnny Orsino,
and Pete Richer!, respectively.
The rest of the team leaves much
to be desired. They have good
possibilities at first base, with
Dick Nen and Bob Chance, and
in pitching, with Phil Ortega, Jim
Hannan, Jim Duckworth, Casey
Cox, and Pete Craig. Vying for
the remaining outfield spot are
Jim King, Willie Kirkland, and
Freddy Valentine. Second base
will be manned by Don Blasingame and Ken Hamlin. Eddie
Brinkman is a shortstop with
great range and arm, but he can
barely hit his own weight. The
Senators have the manpower to
finish in seventh place, but could
finish in tenth position if Howard
and Lock fail to hit, and if Richert comes up with a sore arm.
Ronnie Kline and Steve Ridzik
provide some support out of the
bullpen, but I’m afraid there is
just too much to support on the
Senators for this duo to be able
to move the team very far up
in the standings.
Kansas City Athlatics—Outside
of the most outspoken owner
(Charles 0. Finley) and the flashiest uniforms (green and gold)
in baseball today, the Athletics
(the Mets of the AL) have little
to offer. Aside from the infield,
few positions have as yet been
claimed. In the infield the A’s
do have Harrelson at first, Green
at second, Campaneris (who has
been injured most of the spring)
at short, Charles on third, and
Wayne Causey as the main reserve. Bill Bryan is a potentially
fine catcher and power man, but
he hasn’t reached any real standards yet. The pitching staff is
chock full of untried and untrue
men who have yet to prove themselves as major leaguers. On the
staff are Talbot, Sheldon, O’Donoghue, Wyatt, Stock, Aker, Buschorn, Monteagudo, Krausse, Grzenda, Dickson, and last, but surely
not least, Catfish Hunter. How’s
that for a mound staff! It reminds
me of the Pale Hose’s array of
(lingers.
Patrolling the picket
positions are Mike Hershberger,

to be desired the past few years.
also like the Tigers, the Indians
Schaal can’t help but imPaul
bullpen,
a
McDowell,
good
lack
prove at the hot corner under
Siebert, Tiant, Kralick, and rookthe expert tutelage of Malzone.
ie Tom Kelley are all excellent
outfielders from last
starters, but since Gary Bell is Holdoverare Willie Simth, Jose
season
also attempting to become a startand Albie Pearson. The
er once again, and Don McMahon Cardenal,
Angels should have an interestis growing old, the bullpen is
ing team because of the contrastwell understocked. Lee Stange, ing ages
of many of the players
who has made a career out of
starting
defeating the Orioles, is around, on the team. Their solid
staff, along with Lee, should be
to
an
but he is too erratic
be
enough to lift the otherwise weak
effective fireman. Rookies Steve Angels
into the seventh slot.
Hargan and Floyd Weaver are
Boston Rod Sox—The Red Sox
endeavoring to make the squad
had the worst pitching staff in
but rookies are an unsure comseason, and accordmodity. The catching with Azcue, baseball last
ingly finished in ninth place. The
Crandall, and either Doc Edwards relief pitching, with the sudden
or Duke Sims is fine, as is the
collapse of the Monster, Dick
outfield comprised of Colavito,
was horrendous and the
Radatz,
Hinton,
Davalillo,
Wagner,
Landis,
starters weren’t much better. The
and Chico Salmon. The second
Bosox had such fine players as
base combo of Larry Brown and
Conigliaro, Thomas,
Pedro Gonzalez proved to be an Yastrzemski,
unexpected pleasure last season and Mantilla, but it was to no
avail, as the pitching and porous
as was the play of Freddie Whitdefense were constantly nagging
field at first base. If Max Alvis
To improve
can improve his hitting, third at the Beantowners.
the pitching and defense, Boston
base will be one of the Tribe’s acquired
such standouts as Bob
better positions. On paper, the
Indians always appear to be very Sadowski, Danny Osinski, George
George Thomas! Most
strong, but there is something Smith, and
of these men won’t strike much
about the ntonths of July, August,
fear in the hearts of their Amerand September that bothers the
ican League foes, but they should
Indians seriously. Maybe the Instabilize the team.
dians can overcome the annual definitely help
second half slump this season Also of help should be rookies
Joey Foy, and
and seriously contend for the flag. Tony Horton,
George Scott, especially M. Foy,
It is possible.
a likely prospect for the rookieof-the-year award. The starters
New York Yankee*—The Bombyear: Dave Morehead,
ers had their worst season in at from last
10-18; Jim Lonborg, 9-17; and Earl
least twenty years last year, and
Wilson, 13-14, all return along
if Bouton and Downing don’t exwith such rookies as Guido Grilli,
perience comebacks, they can't
Jerry Stephenson, Darrell Branpossibly finish higher than fifth.
A healthy Maris and Mantle don, and Pete Charton. Outfield
spares will be Jim Gosger, Joe
would undoubtedly help the YanChristopher, and Lenny Green.
kee cause, but I believe Bouton
(who has really been rocked so Rico Petrocelli showed some
far this spring) and Downing are promise last year and should
the keys to a possible rise. I do remain as the incumbent shortstop. The defense should be betnot believe playing Bobby Murcer at shortstop would serve them ter, but the hitting probably won’t
be able to compensate for the
any purpose, as the rookie’s fielding inadequacies would become lack of pitching,
Washington Senators
The
especially apparent in the Big
Senators should be strong this
City and at the shortstop position. The Yankees still have the
potential to be an explosive club,
but even with the addition of Bob
Friend, the pitching appears to
be a little weak. With Amaro at
short and a healthy Howard and
AMERICAN
Maris, the Bombers would have
a fine defensive club, though
STEVE
STEVE
team speed would not be overSCHUELEIN
FARBMAN
whelming. Mel Stottlemyre is the
mainstay of the pitching staff,
Detroit
1—Minnesota
and a healthy Ford would be of
Minnesota
immeasurable help. However, the
2 Chicago
question marks on the team are
Chicago
3—Detroit
too numerous for me to pick
Cleveland
them any higher than sixth place.
Baltimore
A pennant could still be theirs if
New York
everything went right, but fifth or
California
7—New York
sixth place is their most logical
place of finish, considering everyWashington
8—Washington
thing.
Boston
9 Boston
10—KC
KC
California Angels—A new park,
—

Jl 1966

(Cont’d on Pg. 8)

PENNANT

—

—

new town, and new faces on the
squad should be the highlights
of the 1966 season for the Angels.
The new town is ‘Anaheim and
the new faces are Spanky Kirkpatrick, Rick Reichardt, Norm

Siebern, Lew Burdette, Frank
Malzone, and Jack Sanford. The
latter three hopefully will be
steadying influences on the many
young players the Angels have.
The pitching staff is led by Dean
Chance, Freddy Newman, George
Brunet, Harcelino Lopez and Big
Bob Lee. Jim Fregosi and Bobby
Knoop form one of the best

LEAGUE
BOB

FREY

SCOTT
FORMAN

Chicago

Baltimore

Minnesota

New York

Detroit

Chicago

Baltimore
Cleveland

Boston
Detroit

New York

Minnesota

California
Washington
Boston
KC

California
Cleveland
Washington
KC

NATIONAL LEAGUE
1— Cincinnati
2—LA

3—SF
4—St. Louis
5—Pittsburgh

6— Atlanta
7—Philadelphia
8— Chicago
9— Houston

10—New York

Cincinnati
Cincinnati
Philadelphia

LA

Atlanta

Pittsburgh

Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati

SF
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Chicago

Atlanta

LA

Philadelphia
St. Louis

Atlanta

New York

St. Louis
Chicago

New York

Chicago

New York

Houston

Houston

Houston

SF

�Friday, April 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

National League
By MICHAEL CASTRO

Once again the peerless prognosticator returns with his annual analysis of the National
League’s imminent pennant struggle. The renowned Swami Foxala,
still fuming after a jealous league
president stole a pennant from
his last year’s selection the Giants, has been coaxed back to
give us another glimpse into his
almost infallible crystal ball. The
Swami, who feels the RoseboroMarichal incident was part of an
international conspiracy of
“power brokers” to cause his
prediction to fail and thus tarnish his reputation, denied the
vulgar rumors that his archenemy the Thallus of Marchantia
was behind the plot, but speculation persists. “The Thallus,”
Swami Foxala chuckled, “that
bum couldn’t carry my crystal
ball-bag. I didn’t want to predict
the National League this year,”
Foxala said modestly, “'because
the outcome of the race is so
obvious.” The Lebanese Lip,
whose past blunders (including
the first place prediction of the
1964-66 SjF. Warrior team, so
familiar to Spectrum readers) he
has blamed on “cruel and unjust
journalistic tactics,” and “typographical tyranny”, submitted his
official 1966 predictions smugly
to this reporter at A pre-arranged
rendezvous at the Norton Coffee
machine. Foxala had just uttered
an eternal curse over the machine
after losing his last dime in it.
He disappeared into the balmy
night muttering “Foster Castleman lives

7. St. Louis Cardinals
8. Chicago Cubs
9. Houston Astros
10. Amazing Mets

out of contention. Their blend of
hitting, speed, defense, pitching
and depth should bring Pittsburgh
a championship.

2) Dodgers: Essentially the
same team as last year's. Tommy
1) Pirates: The Pirates, according to Foxala, are the most underDavis has not seemed to recover
from his broken leg and may not
rated and best balanced team in
the league. “The only thing that be able to beat out Lou Johnson
could keep them from going all for the left field job. Without
the way,” he says, “is my picking Davis’ big bat, the Dodgers’ atthem.” Their superb overall detack is built around Maury Wills
and a prayer. The team’s over-all
fense and slashing, spray-type
defense is poor with only weakhitting is briliantly adapted to
hitting first-baseman Wes Parker
the spacious confines of Forbes
Field. They have the League’s an accomplished fielder. The
Dodgers will once again try to
best s e c o n d-baseman in Bill
Mazeroski and right fielder in
do it with their three superpitchers—Koufax, Drysdale and
Roberto Clemente. Slugging WilOsteen, with Perranoski and Millie Stargell, first baseman Donn
Clendenon, and shortstop Gene ler in relief, but K &amp; D’s holdout
will hurt them in the early part
Alley are all young players who
of the season until the boys get
are reaching the peaks of their
in shape.
promising careers. Jim Pagliaroni
is a solid receiver who hits well.
3) Giants; The Giants have been
The infield of Clendenon, Mazeroski, Alley, and Bob Bailey is great hitting with Willie Mays
looking better than ever and augsecond to none defensively and
mented by Jesus Alou, Jim Hart,
solid with the bat. The outfield
Willie McCovey, Tom Haller and
of Matty Alou and Manny Mota
the expected comeback of Orplatooned in center, flanked by
lando Cepeda. This bevy of slugStargell and Clemente, is also
strong in all departments. Alou, gers is backed up by a strong
bench headed by hard-hitting Len
obtained from the Giants, is perGabrielson. On top of this the
haps the key to Pittsburgh’s penGiant's bullpen with Frank Linzy,
nant thrust. Manager Harry Walker believes Matty, given the Lindy McDaniel and Joe Gibbon
chance to play regularly, will be is among baseball’s best. Mays
and Alou are superb fielders, but
one of the game’s top lead-off
Cepeda is an unnatural left-field
men and base-stealers. The Pirates’ bench, with the game’s best er. The infielders are all adequate
pinch-hitter, Jerry Lynch, Mota, with second baseman Lanier truly
outstanding. Rookie Tito Fuentes
Jesse Gonder, Andre Rodgers and
may beat out Dick Schofield at
a rookie named Dave Roberts, is
shortstop. The Giants’ big prob.”
very strong. The pitching is led
lem is finding starting pitchers
by the veteran Vernon Law and
Here are the Swami’s official strikeout artist Bob Veale, who after the great Juan Marietta).
The club is hoping for great years
are among the league’s best. Don
predictions;
Cardwell and Don Schwall, who
from Bob Bolin, Bob Shaw, or
erratic Gaylord Perry and Ron
both made strong comebacks last
1. Pittsburgh Pirates
Herbel. If these pitchers produce,
season, will be the other starters
2. Los Angeles Dodgers
the Giants could go all the way.
along with Steve Blass, who star3. San Francisco Giants
red in the International League.
4) Reds: Sammy Ellis, Jim MaA1 MeBean, Roy Face and Tommy
4. Cincinnati Reds
Sisk head an excellent bulpen. loney and Milt Pappas head an
5. Atlanta Braves
Only injury, or a bad year by excellent pitching staff. The other
6. Philadelphia Phillies
the aging Law, can keep the Bucs starters will come from among
Joey Jay, Jim OTooIe and Joe
Nuxhall, with Billy McCool heading a bullpen which is not outstanding. The team has good hitting and solid defense but may
miss the inspirational Frank
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Robinson more than statistics can
show. Vada Pinson and Tommy
J. B.
STEVE
LEON
MIKE
Harper must improve their hitCONSENSUS
CASTRO
FEIGIN
SHARCOT
ting to pick up the slack. SlickLEWIS
hitting Pete Rose is being shifted
Cleveland
to third base to make room for a
Chicago
Minnesota
KC
Minnesota
brilliant rookie named Tommy
Minnesota
Chicago
Minnesota
Chicago
Boston
Helms Slugging Deron Johnson
Baltimore
Detroit
New York
California Detroit
will play left field. Should Helms
Detroit
Baltimore
Oregon
Baltimore
Baltimore
make it big, if Pinson, Harper and
Chicago
Cleveland
Cleveland
Baltimore Cleveland
hot-cold Gordy Coleman hit well,
New York
if O’Toole or Jay regain their
New York
Detroit
New York New York
winning ways, if another good
California
California
California
Detroit
California
reliever is developed (Ted DavidBoston
Boston
Boston
Washington
Chicago
son or Jack Baldschun may be
Washington
Boston
Minnesota Washington
Washington
the man), if thg infield shakeup
KC
KC
Milwaukee KC
does not upset the inner defense,
KC
the Reds should go all the way.
There are a lot of ifs.
.

.

PREDICTIONS

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Pittsburgh
LA

SF

Cincinnati

LA

SF

SF

Atlanta
Cincinnati

Atlanta

Cincinnati
Atlanta

Philadelphia
St. Louis

Chicago

Houston
New York

Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Philadelphia
Chicago
New York
Houston

Pittsburgh
Philadelphia
LA
St. Louis

New York
Chicago
Houston

Brooklyn
SF

Cincinnati
SF
LA
Pittsburgh

Atlanta
St. Louis

Chicago
New York
Atlanta
Houston

Philadelphia
St. Louis
Chicago
New York
Houston

5) Braves: The Braves field a
lineup of awesome power. Eight
men, Hank Aaron, Mack Jones,
Felipe Alou, Joe Torre, Gene
Oliver, Eddie Mathews, Dennis
Menke, and Rico Carty can be
counted on for more than twenty
home runs. Their offensive power
is so formidable that sluggers
like Carty, Oliver and Frank
Thomas are usually on the bench.
The outfield of Alou, Jones, and
Aaron is brjlliant defensively but
the infield defense is only ordin-

PAGE ELEVEN

with shortstop Menke the
weak link. Joe Torre is the
league’s best catcher. Pitching is
the Braves’ big problem. Tony
Cloninger, a 24-game winner, is
their ace, but after him there is
only aging Ken Johnson, and erratic but promising Wade Blasingame, Denny Lemaster and perhaps Hank Fischer. Billy O’Dell
heads a bullpen which, after him,
is horrible. Relief pitchers and
starters are desperately needed,
but if one of each comes through,
the Braves’ big bats could power
them to a pennant.
ary

6) Phillies: Acquired the sparks
of the Cardinals' pennant-winning
team in Dick Groat and Bill
White. White remains the league’s
best all-round first baseman, but
Groat may be slowing down at
36. Groat will probably split shortstop with light-hitting Bobby
Wine. He may, however, be shifted to third if manager Gene
Mauch loses patience with the
erratic glove of Richie Allen,
Such a move would dictate moving the intense Allen to the outfield and probably cause some
dissension problems on the volatile Phillies ( Johnny Callison is
set in right field but the rest of
the outfield is undistinguished,
Johnny Briggs, Adolpho Phillips,
Tony Gonzalez, and Jackie Brandt
will probably be platooncd. Catching is barely adequate with Clay
Dalrymple and Bob Uecker. Jim
Bunning, Chris Short, and Ray
Culp head a pitching staff that
tails off drastically after them,
with Gary Wagner heading a thin
bullpen. Rookie pitchers Darold
Knowles, Ferguson Jenkins, and
Grant Jackson, or veteran Bo Belinsky must come through if the
Phils are to threaten.

7) Cardinals: Traded away
Boyer, Groat, and White and hope
to rebuild around a crop of speedy
,

rookies,

in

.

the mold of the Dod

gers.
Their pitching however
seems to preclude the venture

being sueeesful Bob Gibson is
an outstanding pitcher, but after
him are such question marks as
kckson ’ Art Mahaffey, Ray
ui
Curt Simmons, all of
Washburn,
whom were losing pitchers last
year. Tracey Stallard and an im
pressive rookie named Larry Jas
ter should help as starters and
Hal Woodeschick heads a medi
ocre bullpen
Curt Flood, Lou
Brock and Alex Johnson man the
outfield and along with Julian

’J

Javier and rookie first basemenoutfielders George Kernek and
Bob Tolan form the nucleus of
the Cards revamped speed of
fense. The )eft s‘de of the mfield

with Charlie Smith at third and

either Jerry Buchek or Dal Maxvill at short, is sub-par both
offensively and defensively, and
this, along with shaky pitching,
should keep the Cards in thr
second division.

have caught Leo’s eye and Randy
Hundley, acquired from the Giants, may wind up handling the
catching. The Cubs could give the
Cards a battle if their pitching'
holds up.
9) Astros: The Astros will again
be a tough team in spite of their
low finish. They have a genuine
star in fleet centerfielder Jim
Wynn and Rusty Staub and Joe
Morgan appear to be coming into
their own. Walt Bond and Lee
Maye, two well-travelled players,
will probably divide the third
outfield spot. Bob Aspromonte is
a solid major leaguer at third
base, and a good-looking rookie
named Chuck Harrison may beat
Jim Gentile out of his first base
job. John Bateman, who has yet
to prove he is a Big Leaguer,
will catch. The story in Houston
could be a spectacular rookie
shortstop named Sonny Jackson
who seems to have the blinding
speed, batting and fielding ability
to be a big star. Dick Farrell and
Robin Roberts head a tough pitching staff which includes Bob
Bruce, young Larry Dierker, Jim
Owens, Claude Raymond and
Barry Latman.
10) Mefs: In spite of a tenth
place finish, this should be the
best Met team ever. Veterans
Ken Boyer and Roy McMillan
give the team some class and
probably the best defensive left
side of the infield in the league.
Unfortunately, Dick Stuart (Dr.
Strangeglove) is positioned on
the right side, and occasionally
he will be teaming with Chuck
Hiller (Dr No). Put Ron Swoboda
in right field and you've got the
best comedy trio since the Marx
Brothers. The regular second
baseman, Ron Hunt, is a dandy,
but he is perennially plagued by
Injuries, Ed Kranepool, who will
shift betwcen first basc and the
outfieid, is still a hitter of great
promise as are second year men
Swoboda and Johnny Lewis. Wes
Westrum is insisting that Jim
Hickman wi „ bc his centerfieIder
out and is expecting
in . d
d
b , things {rom the occasiona i
slugger bu Hickman seems to
bave a bab jt of disappointing
managers . Tbe cate hing is very
weak and wi „ probab , wind up
jn thp hands of original Met
chris cannizarro and John Stephenson Tbe beloved choo&lt;;hoo
Colcman has an outside cbance
A youngster named Greg Goossen
should he , after a little scason.
jn
Westrum will g0 with the
young&lt;&gt;st pitching staff
|ea
Jack Fisher 27 Jack
Hamilton. 27, and fireballing
youngsters Tug McGraw, 20, Dick
Selma 22 and Rob Gardner 21
will start. Larry Bearnarth. Dave
Eilers Gordy Richardson, and
Darrell Sutherland man a bullpen
which is pretty good. The Mcts’
young pitching and strong infield
should make them an interesting,
ess terrible, and still loveable
,

|

team.

Cubs: Leo Durocher will try
to inject new life into the Cubs,
but it seems.doubtful that he will
be able to improve their stand
ing. He has a nucleus of stars in
Ernie Banks, Run Santo, and
Billy Williams, and a young slickfielding double-play combination
in Don Kessingcr and Glenn Beckert Leo is trying to work his
magic on castoffs Wes Covington
and Ty Cline or his outfield and
sore-armed Ernie Broglio for his
pitching staff,
Dick Ellsworth,
Bill Paul, and aging Larry Jackson and Bob Buhl form a pretty
good crew of starters and Ted
Abernathy is a one-man bullpen.
Rookies Dick Hands and Ken
Holtman are young pitchers who
8)

The Swami has spoken.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

pa rtn

'

*ri

Prtii, Jnc.

.Myall &amp; Soil/,
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(&lt;t Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

�Friday, April 8,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

=*=&lt;£=*=■*=*=

1986

s

Spring Football Begins
The “new look” in UB football
began taking shape last Monday
when the Bulls held their first
session of spring practice under
new coach Richard “Doc” Urich,
former Notre Dame assistant.
Although only 70 players, including 23 lettermen, were on
the official roster, 87 hopefuls responded

NICK CAPUANA

RICK WELLS

to

Monday’s

Jim Webber Athlete of the Year

Jim Webber, UB's senior halfback from Manlius, was awarded
the Dom Grossi Award as UB’s
Athlete of the Year at the 59th
annual Athletic Awards Banquet
at the Leonard Post, VFW, on
Monday evening.

Webber, a 5-9, 170-lb. speedster, is also a sprinter on the
track team and a Dean's List
student. Webber, who transferred
from Wooster College in Ohio
to UB in his sophomore year,
was also awarded an ECAC medal
for his combined athletic and
scholastic achievements.

The highlight of the dinner
an address by “Sleepy Jim”

was

Crowley, one of the Four Horsemen of Notre Dame. Following
Crowley’s after-dinner words, Dr.
Anthony S. Gugino, Chairman of
the Faculty Committee on Athletics, presented the awards.

Of the three most coveted
awards given, Webber was honthe Grossi
ored with two
Award and the ECAC Medal. The
third trophy, the Coach’s Award
presented to the senior athlete
with the highest scholastic aver—

age,

was given to

Pete Reese, a

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

r

vvvvvO

x^

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MEN'S SHOPS

Naturally
creates the

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Reason—
A Fresh
Tailored of
i-Wool and Mohair
to Perfection

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$65.00
0th«' smU
540 DC to
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Troppman; Honorary Team Captain
CaH Millerschoen; Fritz
Lavelle Award to “Outstanding
—

Dr. Alexander Katz
Dr. Lou Krop
OPTOMETRISTS

Open Daily

10 A.M.

to 9:30 P.M.
.

OWIVntSITY PLAZA

TP.ANSITOWN PLAZA

opening

drill. The coming of Urich on
the scene has generated a new
wave of gridiron enthusiasm on
the Buffalo campus.
The new coach is a devotee of
the passing game and will seek
to change the Buffalo image
which in recent years has
been that of a conservative grindit-out club. To effect this change,
however, Urich will need a quarterback with passing ability. The
JIM DUNN
TOM HURD
three leading aspirants for the
job are Rick Wells, 6-0 191-pound
junior from Ithaca, N.Y.; Nick
Capuana, 5-9 170 pound senior
from Utica, N.Y.; and Mick Murtha, a 5-11 170-pound sophomore
from Endicott, N.Y. Wells started
Freshman Swimmer”—Paul Gaulast season as No. 1 signalcalier
track letterman with a 2.49 avthier
and carried on until the 5th game
erage.
BASKETBALL
of the campaign when he sufferOther awards were given to:
James J. Ailinger Most Valuable ed a broken leg. Despite this
William Barth; fact he still was the team leader
Player Award
HarHonoarry Team Captain
in total offense for the season and
vey Poe; Outstanding Freshman
showed enough promise to indiPlayer
Edward Eberle
cate that he could be an outstanding star. Capuana took over
FOOTBALL
after Wells’ injury and guided
Most Valuable Lineman (Offense)
the team to wins in the last three
—Richard Ashley; Most Valuable games
of the season when the
Gerald LaLineman (Defense)
Bulls outscored the opposition
Fountain; Most Valuable Back 70-7. Murtha was selected the
(Offense)
Leeland Jones, III;
Most Valuable Back on last year’s
Most Valuable Back (Defense)
freshman team.
Daniel Sella; Most Improved PlayIf the throwing end of the
er
Michael Wuest; Most Valpassing game is questionable, the
Mark
uable Freshman Back
receiving end is not UB has a
Murtha; Most Valuable Freshman
solid corps of receivers, headed
John
Wesoldwski
Lineman
by ends Dick Ashley and Jim
Dunn and halfback Tom Hurd.
BASEBALL
1965 Most Valuable Player—Earl Ashley, 6-2 201-pound junior
from 'Massena, N.Y., caught 17
Tomkins
passes last year for 349 yards
HOCKEY CLUB
and 7 touchdowns and already
has attracted the attention of pro
Benjamin Plaster Memorial TroCROSS-COUNTRY
scouts.
phy
William Savage
Kerns;
Oustanding Runner—John
Two more promising sophoBlankets were presented on beOutstanding Freshman Runner—
mores who will be watched durhalf of the UB Athletic DepartAnthony Nicotera.
ing spring practice are Jack
ment to:
GOLF
Richard W. Offenhamer, former Wesolowski, a 6-0 205-pound lineMost Valuable Golfer Edward
head football coach; Ronald M. backer, and Steve Svec, a 6-0
Nvsblatt
195-pound halfback.
LaRocque, former assistant footWRESTLING
The UB team will work out
ball coach and wrestling coach;
Charles K. Bassett Award to “OutWilliam C. Baird, vice-chairman on days when weather permits.
standing Wrestler”—William Miof the Council of the SUNY at An intra-squad scrimmage will
ner; Bassett Award to High-Point
Buffalo; Robert E. Rich, member be held at Rotary Field on April
Man—Gary Fowler; Gene Hiller
30 and a game between the varof the Board of the UB FoundaAward to “Most Improved Wresttion; Charles K. Bassett, long-time sity and the alumni is tentativeler”—Robert Heidt; Outstanding backer of UB wrestling program; ly slated to be held on the
Thomas
Freshman Wrestler
Dick Johnston, sportswriter for evening of May 6 at a site still
Dewey
to be named.
Buffalo Evening News.
FENCING
Fencer of the Year—Joseph Paul;
Sandy Sober Sabre Award—Robert Frey; Outstanding Freshman
Fencer
Steven Morris
SWIMMING
Roy
Most Valuable Swimmer

Contact Lenses
Complete Eye Care
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226
Phone: 135-3311

Ut PMtfcall (Wins* Into S»rta« TraMnfl

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          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
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                  <text>Spectrum, the University at Buffalo's Student Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>&lt;div&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;</text>
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              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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                  <text>LIB-UA006</text>
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      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
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        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1295931">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1452735">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295906">
                <text>Spectrum, 1966-04-08</text>
              </elementText>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295911">
                <text>Issue is incorrectly printed as number 35.</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295912">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1295913">
                <text>1966-04-08</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295915">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295916">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295917">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295918">
                <text>Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295919">
                <text>LIB-UA006_v16n36_19660408</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="87">
            <name>Alternative Title</name>
            <description>An alternative name for the resource. The distinction between titles and alternative titles is application-specific.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1295920">
                <text>Spectrum</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295921">
                <text>Spectrum (Buffalo, N.Y. : 1950)</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="91">
            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295922">
                <text>2016-08-10</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="105">
            <name>Is Part Of</name>
            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295923">
                <text>Spectrum</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295924">
                <text>LIB-UA006</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="109">
            <name>Is Version Of</name>
            <description>A related resource of which the described resource is a version, edition, or adaptation. Changes in version imply substantive changes in content rather than differences in format.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1295925">
                <text>v16n[36]</text>
              </elementText>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="113">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295926">
                <text>12 p.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295927">
                <text>United States</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295928">
                <text>New York</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295929">
                <text>Erie County</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1295930">
                <text>Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1445478">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Periodicals.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1445479">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Periodicals.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1445480">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals -- New York (State) -- Buffalo.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1445481">
                <text>Student publications -- New York (State) -- Buffalo -- Periodicals.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1877333">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use.  This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;.  If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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